Related
Ever since I flashed the 213 leak, battery life has been a bit disappointing. To help things along, I downloaded SetCPU (haven't used it since my good ole OG Droid) and let it autodetect settings. To my surprise the governor was set to 'interactive' instead of hotplug like it was on stock GB.
My understanding is that hotplug allows the phone to disable unneeded cores during periods of low utilization, while interactive does not (although both cores can be disabled when the phone is sleeping). Do you think switching to hotplug from interactive will improve battery life?
My battery life is much better since switching, but I also disabled 4G (on WiFi most of the time) and added screen off and low battery profiles (600mhz and 800mhz max respectively) which muddy the waters a bit. I thought I would mention it on here for those of you who feel the same, it might be an easy way to improve battery life on the leak.
That's interesting. I've been using the .213 leak and my battery life has been quite good. I haven't noticed any particular drop in battery life, and I keep 4G on all the time. If I don't use my phone much, it's not uncommon for me to have 60% left at the end of the day.
Do you use anything like SetCPU? I am wondering whether I can confirm that the default governor of the leak does not shut off one of the CPUs when it is idle. If nobody can confirm I'll get around to checking it myself this weekend :laugh:
Sorry, I haven't messed with my cpu settings.
READ EVERYTHING BEFORE ATTEMPTING ALSO DO SO AT YOUR OWN RISK.
Required. you must have an oc and voltage support kernel. jfbs stock roms have both oc and voltage. cars1189 stock rom does not but he provides link to kernels that do. Dont use exuv or uv kernels while doing this. well you can but if your new to this it is recommended to use regular oc kernel without uv/exuv. Also ram size does not matter.
What else do you need:
an app that allows you to change clock speed and voltages. if you dont already have one get performance control here (i use this thanks to jfbs for finding it).
*NOTE* never ever leave phone unintended when doing this until you find your chips sweet spot. YOU HAVE BEEN WARNED. otherwise if you listen and follow my advice you wont cause any major harm to your phone or any harm to your phone. Also do NOT have the settings apply at boot until you find all your settings. keep a pen or pencil and paper ready so you can remember workings settings.
1. remove case (if you have one on your phone) and battery cover. (this is just a safety precaution should your power button not work to pull that battery.
2. open up your overclocking app. (in my case performance control). set min and max frequency/speed to 245mhz
3. go to voltage settings and change the current voltage for 245760khz (really 245mhz) which is stock 900mV to 875mV (decrease by 0.25). close app out swipe around home screen and apps draw. open and close contacts list and see if phone freezes. we are not worried about phone running slow at this point until you reach 1ghz+ point of this. IF phone freezes/locks up hold power button to reboot phone or just pull battery and put it back in (personally i just use power button). if phone doesnt not freeze lower voltage again by 0.025 which should be 850mV. continue this process until phone DOES freeze so make sure you you wrote down last working voltage and as soon as phone freezes reboot or pull battery.
4. Once you found the lowest working voltage for 245mhz up the min and max frequency (speed) to 368mhz (368640khz)
5. Do the same thing as step 3 which is decrease the voltage by 0.025mV for the frequency for 365mhz. and repeat for each frequency up to 1ghz. Once you get to doing 1ghz voltage and above. The testing phone phase will be different but still flow the decrease by 0.025mV. for testing use any 3d game not candy crush type. and let it run for at least 10mins actually playing with phone plugged into charger. when you reach the spot where the phone freezes unplug both charger and force reboot/pull battery.
6. Once you find all of your working voltages for each frequency then you can set min back to 245mhz and your max to which ever you was able to hit. then set all of your volt settings in and save it for set on boot.
Note. 1.2ghz-1.4ghz seems to be a very good and safe battery to performance ratio. even more so if you followed my directions properly.
EDIT:
My settings for comparison.
Frequency Range: min.256mhz max 1401mhz(1.4Ghz)
Voltage scale:
122880KHZ - 700mV
245760KHZ - 700mV
368640KHZ - 700mV
768000KHZ - 925mV
806400KHZ - 950mV
902400KHZ - 975mV
1017600KHZ - 1000mV
1113600KHZ - 1050mV
1209600KHZ - 1100mV
1305600KHZ - 1150mV
1401600KHZ - 1200mV
pretty awesome you guys are still squeezing the juice out of the exhibit. XD
teerout said:
pretty awesome you guys are still squeezing the juice out of the exhibit. XD
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
i just got this phone only a year ago... also the guide should work for any phone that has oc and voltage control support. but thanks
my new phone, motorola droid, is not as developer friendly as the samsung. i should have done more research before getting it. motorola and verizon have it pretty locked down, no flashing and awesomeness. getting root privileges was a 15 step process.....oh for the days of flashing with the exhibit...i still have a red case and a green flowery case if anyone wants them.
teerout said:
my new phone, motorola droid, is not as developer friendly as the samsung. i should have done more research before getting it. motorola and verizon have it pretty locked down, no flashing and awesomeness. getting root privileges was a 15 step process.....oh for the days of flashing with the exhibit...i still have a red case and a green flowery case if anyone wants them.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
any electronic can be overclocked and under/over volt. Over voltage is fine if electronic requires a outlet to run e.g pc. game consoles. while undervolt is best for battery operated devices as you would want to have long operation time between charging xD.
Updated OP with my personal settings for this phone.
Thanks for the guide, Will be giving this a try this weekend... Well this and possibly flashing that new Mahdi Rom for the exhibit
Thanks!
TripFX said:
READ EVERYTHING BEFORE ATTEMPTING ALSO DO SO AT YOUR OWN RISK.
Required. you must have an oc and voltage support kernel. jfbs stock roms have both oc and voltage. cars1189 stock rom does not but he provides link to kernels that do. Dont use exuv or uv kernels while doing this. well you can but if your new to this it is recommended to use regular oc kernel without uv/exuv. Also ram size does not matter.
What else do you need:
an app that allows you to change clock speed and voltages. if you dont already have one get performance control here (i use this thanks to jfbs for finding it).
*NOTE* never ever leave phone unintended when doing this until you find your chips sweet spot. YOU HAVE BEEN WARNED. otherwise if you listen and follow my advice you wont cause any major harm to your phone or any harm to your phone. Also do NOT have the settings apply at boot until you find all your settings. keep a pen or pencil and paper ready so you can remember workings settings.
1. remove case (if you have one on your phone) and battery cover. (this is just a safety precaution should your power button not work to pull that battery.
2. open up your overclocking app. (in my case performance control). set min and max frequency/speed to 245mhz
3. go to voltage settings and change the current voltage for 245760khz (really 245mhz) which is stock 900mV to 875mV (decrease by 0.25). close app out swipe around home screen and apps draw. open and close contacts list and see if phone freezes. we are not worried about phone running slow at this point until you reach 1ghz+ point of this. IF phone freezes/locks up hold power button to reboot phone or just pull battery and put it back in (personally i just use power button). if phone doesnt not freeze lower voltage again by 0.025 which should be 850mV. continue this process until phone DOES freeze so make sure you you wrote down last working voltage and as soon as phone freezes reboot or pull battery.
4. Once you found the lowest working voltage for 245mhz up the min and max frequency (speed) to 368mhz (368640khz)
5. Do the same thing as step 3 which is decrease the voltage by 0.025mV for the frequency for 365mhz. and repeat for each frequency up to 1ghz. Once you get to doing 1ghz voltage and above. The testing phone phase will be different but still flow the decrease by 0.025mV. for testing use any 3d game not candy crush type. and let it run for at least 10mins actually playing with phone plugged into charger. when you reach the spot where the phone freezes unplug both charger and force reboot/pull battery.
6. Once you find all of your working voltages for each frequency then you can set min back to 245mhz and your max to which ever you was able to hit. then set all of your volt settings in and save it for set on boot.
Note. 1.2ghz-1.4ghz seems to be a very good and safe battery to performance ratio. even more so if you followed my directions properly.
EDIT:
My settings for comparison.
Frequency Range: min.256mhz max 1401mhz(1.4Ghz)
Voltage scale:
122880KHZ - 700mV
245760KHZ - 700mV
368640KHZ - 700mV
768000KHZ - 925mV
806400KHZ - 950mV
902400KHZ - 975mV
1017600KHZ - 1000mV
1113600KHZ - 1050mV
1209600KHZ - 1100mV
1305600KHZ - 1150mV
1401600KHZ - 1200mV
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Thanks a lot man! I still have this phone, and i am trying to squeeze out as much juice as possible. Going to be switching to the Oneplus one soon, or the nexus 5!
help
Hello i have an exhibit ii 4g running mahdi 4.4.4 kitkat can i just download the performance app and follow this instrccions or do i need to flash a kernel to overlock my phone?
Andresakapaco04 said:
Hello i have an exhibit ii 4g running mahdi 4.4.4 kitkat can i just download the performance app and follow this instrccions or do i need to flash a kernel to overlock my phone?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
all of jfbs roms are overclockable by defualt so just download performance app and follow instructions. be save and watch temps if your overclocking keep it below 35c is possible or if battery gets really warm.
TripFX said:
all of jfbs roms are overclockable by defualt so just download performance app and follow instructions. be save and watch temps if your overclocking keep it below 35c is possible or if battery gets really warm.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Thanks for this response one more question what are the benefits of overlocking my phonr aside from more batery lifee??? ... i wana give this a try so i can keep using my exhibit
Thanks!
This will be helpful when undervolting my parents' phones.
undervolting will give you the better battery life while keeping the same performance
overvolting will drain the battery faster
underclocking will drop performance and save more battery life then just undervolting
overclocking will give you better performance
When it comes to any mobile device it is recommended to undervolt and overclock as you want as much battery life as you can while getting a performance boost or just to undervolt to save battery only.
Desktops are made to handle heat and voltage a lot better thus most ppl will overvolt and overclock to get the fast possible performance as you are always connected to a main power source.
@TripFX, thank you for the comprehensive OC & UV guide. I've been tinkering with the voltage settings for about a week via Performance Control and I think I've found a good spot for both my Exhibit devices.
Here are my settings (using cars1189 Christopher K^Kernel uv vhm 9-9-2014 build)...
EDIT: Updated voltage & CPU settings.
CPU Frequency:
Max. 1401 Mhz
Min. 368 Mhz
Voltage Settings:
122880KHZ - 750 mV
245760KHZ - 750 mV
368640KHZ - 800 mV
768000KHZ - 925 mV
806400KHZ - 950 mV
902400KHZ - 975 mV
1024000KHZ - 1000 mV
1113600KHZ - 1025 mV
1209600KHZ - 1050 mV
1305600KHZ - 1075 mV
1401600KHZ - 1125 mV
Btw, 750 mv is the lowest 122880KHZ, 245769KHZ, and 368640KHZ can be set to using the kernel mentioned above. If anyone wants to go lower, you'll need to try a different kernel or one of jfbs ROMs. cars1189's uv kernels seems to do okay (every device is different though, so be careful) but I would strongly advise against using exuv (both my devices couldn't handle exuv).
Also, device temp. has decreased by a couple degrees overall, couldn't be happier!
jajb said:
Here are my settings (using cars1189 Christopher K^Kernel uv vhm 9-9-2014 build)...
EDIT: Updated voltage & CPU settings.
CPU Frequency:
Max. 1401 Mhz
Min. 368 Mhz
Voltage Settings:
122880KHZ - 750 mV
245760KHZ - 750 mV
368640KHZ - 800 mV
768000KHZ - 925 mV
806400KHZ - 950 mV
902400KHZ - 975 mV
1024000KHZ - 1000 mV
1113600KHZ - 1025 mV
1209600KHZ - 1050 mV
1305600KHZ - 1075 mV
1401600KHZ - 1125 mV
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I almost copied your exact settings for my T679 and it's running nice (I've set min/max to 245 MHz/1209 MHz)
However I was curious as to what you've set for Governor and IO Scheduler; I've just left it on default: ondemand and row. Any other special settings or tweaks?
I ask because temp has definitely lowered, but battery life *I think* seems to drain a bit faster (though I do have a bunch of communication apps that probably sync throughout the day).
ZHXS said:
I almost copied your exact settings for my T679 and it's running nice (I've set min/max to 245 MHz/1209 MHz)
However I was curious as to what you've set for Governor and IO Scheduler; I've just left it on default: ondemand and row. Any other special settings or tweaks?
I ask because temp has definitely lowered, but battery life *I think* seems to drain a bit faster (though I do have a bunch of communication apps that probably sync throughout the day).
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
as far as more tweaks to boost performance. if all the apps you use is art compatible then i'd suggest switching to art. massive cpu difference between davlik and art. least from my own experience. as far as battery drain i would recommend using an app such as greenify. for gov's and sched. mine i left ondemand but sched put it on sio. however i recommend reading over this as it will help you get a much better idea of what would work best for you. everyone uses the their phone differently so it should technically vary from person to person.
Just a heads up to anyone undervolting. Be careful undervolting below 750mv. I noticed on my phone that the battery started overheating at 725mv and below. 750 and above was fine.
Q&A for [KERNEL][D5803&D5833] AndroPlusKernel
Some developers prefer that questions remain separate from their main development thread to help keep things organized. Placing your question within this thread will increase its chances of being answered by a member of the community or by the developer.
Before posting, please use the forum search and read through the discussion thread for [KERNEL][D5803&D5833] AndroPlusKernel. If you can't find an answer, post it here, being sure to give as much information as possible (firmware version, steps to reproduce, logcat if available) so that you can get help.
Thanks for understanding and for helping to keep XDA neat and tidy!
Thanks
Very nice kernel, fast and smooth - great work and port.
Anyone knows if it's possible to use any third party kernel app to boost the headset volume?
Working
Hi this is my first post, infact I joined so I could report my findings.
I would just like to confirm so far that V5 working on my Z3C using the .93 firmware. I didn't need to wipe cache/dalvik/data partitions either.
For purposes of settings configuration, I'll be using TricksterMod
For stress testing purposes I'll be using Stability Test 2.7
Overclocking
Overclocking seems to work, I'll stress test and report back with the results.
I was wrong, it is unstable when overclocking and stress testing, with the phone force rebooting 1-5 seconds in to the stability test which loaded all 4 cores. Tried 2899Mhz and 2880Mhz (were both unstable and didn't try 2.72, 2.75, 2.57 either - I might try stability testing them.) Was completely stable at 2.47GHz, and it actually stuck there, no throttling in place! I stopped the stress test when the CPU temp was around 77-80C as my hand was getting burnt! The battery temp reached about 46C. It took 10 mins of stress testing for this to be reached. When the stock kernel was in place it would begin throttling after about 1-20 seconds under full load. First 2.2GHz, then 2 then 1.7 then 1.5 and eventually 1.25 after about 2-4mins.
I couldn't do a single core test though. I suspect as most games use single core or dual cores it wouldn't get overly hot.
My opinion is that fast clocked phones should be marketed with 2 speeds. The highest it'll reach under a boost mode (turbo for Intel's i5 and i7 series), and a slower speed that it'll average out at under thermal pressure. The Z3Cs would be turbo: 2.5GHz and normal: 1.5GHz.
Governors
These are quick tests I'm performing here to provide a quick look at responsiveness and potential unnecessary CPU jump ups.
Wheatley - most of the time it's hovering at top speed when approx CPU usage is 9%, it'll occasionally hunt down to 300Mhz but then right back up to 2899MHz. This one is speedy though. Governor tunables available.
Lagfree - idles at 300MHz - 960MHz then hunts up to 2.2-2.9Ghz when needed and turns on the second core. It seems to slow back down to idle. This one seems to have fast scrolling, sliding notifications pane quickly). No governor tunables.
SmartassV2 - idles at 300Mhz, speeds up to 422-960 on core 0, and turns on core 1 at 1.2-1.5GHz for a few seconds under fast scrolling and notification pane opening. Seems quite responsive. Probably good for battery life hopefully with the responsiveness of Interactive. No governor tunables.
Lionheart - Idles at 960 MHz for a few seconds then slows down to 300MHz with the odd increase to 729MHz. Core 0 and Core 1 reaches 1.26GHz under scrolling, notification pane opening. As fast as the others. Governor tunables available.
Hotplugging
Intelliplug appears to work better than MP-Decision - now only one core is on during idle, instead of 2.
MP-Decision was disabled to avoid conflicts.
Undervolting
I've only undervolted 300MHz to 675MHz from 775MHz as of writing this post.
Tried quickly undervolting in trickstermod by setting them all about -75mV, stability tested it, appears stable. I'll tweak the voltages a bit better when I do a scaling stability test.
Issues I've experienced
Sound Control is the only thing so far that causes a reboot. However music still plays over the speakers and headphones. Equaliser works too.
Upon rebooting, the CPU top speed will set itself to 2.2GHz, despite being set higher and saved at a higher speed in Trickstermod. Certainly trivial though.
Strange thing I've noticed: On the undervolt part I've noticed that there is a freq called 3033MHz, but no 2899MHz freq. Just an observation.
Misc
Force Fast Charge confirmed working! Before flashing new kernel charge went up 5% in about half an hour. It's now up another 5% in a matter of 5-10mins. This is when plugged to my PC.
Vibrator strength - set to 20 from 31, much quieter on table and can still feel it.
I'd like to say a huge thank you to DooMLoRD and AndroPlus for developing this stable kernel. Now my Z3C is worth the £28 a month I'm paying for again. Since this silly lad decided to bork the camera, Bravia functionality etc by rooting it on the first day. I'll report back and edit the post with my findings.
Max won't go beyond 2.266 GHz, Min won't change.
Hi All,
Firstly, great job with the kernel. Our Z3C is such a capable piece of kit and this just makes it that much better.
I'm running stock, 23.0.A.2.93, unlocked, rooted.
Problem:
I've tried using both SetCPU and No-Frills and while both show frequencies that are supposedly selectable above 2.266 GHz, neither app would actually respond. Meaning the max frequency will still only be 2.266 GHz even if I tried selecting something like 2.458 GHz (which should be selectable given that stock is 2.458 GHz.) See caps.
In addition, the Min value just won't change at all from 300 MHz. The frequencies scale up and down as the load changes but I can't raise the Min (again using both SetCPU and No-Frills) from 300 MHz.
Tried: I've tried turning off stamina mode and frozen apps that could control CPU activity (e.g. I use DS Battery Saver). I changed up Governors and Schedulers. I've tried re-flashing the kernel and it still doesn't change these behaviors.
Question/Need help: Just wanted to ask if anybody else have any problems setting the max frequency beyond 2.266 GHz and/or changing the minimum frequency from 300 MHz? Would appreciate any help resolving this behavior.
Thanks in advance!
pjmanalo said:
Hi All,
Firstly, great job with the kernel. Our Z3C is such a capable piece of kit and this just makes it that much better.
I'm running stock, 23.0.A.2.93, unlocked, rooted.
Problem:
I've tried using both SetCPU and No-Frills and while both show frequencies that are supposedly selectable above 2.266 GHz, neither app would actually respond. Meaning the max frequency will still only be 2.266 GHz even if I tried selecting something like 2.458 GHz (which should be selectable given that stock is 2.458 GHz.) See caps.
In addition, the Min value just won't change at all from 300 MHz. The frequencies scale up and down as the load changes but I can't raise the Min (again using both SetCPU and No-Frills) from 300 MHz.
Tried: I've tried turning off stamina mode and frozen apps that could control CPU activity (e.g. I use DS Battery Saver). I changed up Governors and Schedulers. I've tried re-flashing the kernel and it still doesn't change these behaviors.
Question/Need help: Just wanted to ask if anybody else have any problems setting the max frequency beyond 2.266 GHz and/or changing the minimum frequency from 300 MHz? Would appreciate any help resolving this behavior.
Thanks in advance!
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Try installing TricksterMod (from Google Play store, trust me, you'll love it!) Then go to General and set the max speed to 2.46GHz or higher, and try using the Ondemand Governor too. I noticed that it wouldn't stick properly sometimes when using Interactive governor. If it doesn't stick for you then turn Frequency Lock on. Then check in the info tab that it's hitting the higher speed. Personally I'd recommend leaving the min speed on 300MHz. If you need constant high speeds, select the performance governor.
DBCJoey said:
Try installing TricksterMod (from Google Play store, trust me, you'll love it!) Then go to General and set the max speed to 2.46GHz or higher, and try using the Ondemand Governor too. I noticed that it wouldn't stick properly sometimes when using Interactive governor. If it doesn't stick for you then turn Frequency Lock on. Then check in the info tab that it's hitting the higher speed. Personally I'd recommend leaving the min speed on 300MHz. If you need constant high speeds, select the performance governor.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Thanks! That did the trick!
Odd that my usual app for the job across 4 other phones - SetCPU - doesn't work on what should essentially be the same job. [emoji55]
Please make sound_control drivers work so its possible to boost headphone volume on the Xperia Z3 Compact... Thanks
Nice work, a lot of updates I like it!
Is it possible to add a change log?
Thanks!
kernel for d5803 with the .93 but not .105
i search a kernel for the d5803 with the last .93 french version of phone
.5.77
Works great! Thanks a lot
Link for Z3C_D5803_AndroPlusKernel_v10.zip is dead
Pls upload in another location.
Yay sound control is working, thank you so much you're the best!
How to make this?
Hi AndroPlus,
I'm trying to figure out how one would go about building this boot.img that you've created.
What platform and compiler are you using?
Where are you getting sources the for the kernel? This file?
c9af6fc647060fb85dd646798453ec8f 23.0.A.2.105.tar.bz2
How do you construct boot.img from zImage + recovery?
Sorry if these are dumb questions.
Edit: never mind, I figured this out.
http://developer.sonymobile.com/kno...evices/how-to-build-and-flash-a-linux-kernel/ contains most of the information I needed.
The arm version of gcc that ships with Ubuntu 14.04 worked fine - arm-none-eabi-gcc (4.8.2-14ubuntu1+6) - no need to track down any mystery binaries. I did have to make several modifications to the kernel source to get it to build. Interestingly, some of the cpufreq stuff contained code that was incorrect. Someone at Samsung needs to go look up what "sequence point" means.
The hardest part was figuring out how to turn the zImage + ramdisk into something I could boot.
This: https://github.com/sonyxperiadev/mkqcdtbootimg was the correct tool to use - again, no need to track down any mystery mkbootimg or dtbTool binaries.
Hope this is helpful to someone. As someone new to Xperia dev, I found most of the information out there worse than useless.
dear modders
i just want to say i overclocked my htc one m7 cpu from 1.7ghz to 2.1 GHZ
with a custom kernel called ElementalX-m7-22.3-Sense
is this save can the phone run this without any stability issue's or shall i downclock it to 1.9
i use M7_Sense7_artmod_10.0 rom Lolipop 5.0.2 with sense 7 cause this is the only one without any bugs like no sound when you got called or sms sound's no boot sounds
i fixed my boot sound anyway on this rom
so my question is wont my phone be fried by this overclock cause i saw in the aroma installer that it can be overclock till 3 GHZ
greets Rubenownz
Overclocking the CPU in any system usually results in 2 main things:
a. Significantly shorter battery life.
b. heating issues.
sometimes (less frequently) you might experience a crash and fc here and there.
So yeah, it won't be all rainbows and butterflies.
PS: you probably won't reap the benefits of your now overclocked CPU without an app like no frills CPU or kernel Aduitor. Your device's performance isn't just about its CPU frequency, there's the min Max frequency your system is allowed to utilize, the CPU governor, and the I/o scheduler..
and
PPS: don't and I repeat DO NOT go anywhere near 3 GHz.
good luck.
I'm runnimg 2.1 Ghz OC for over 2 years without any issues. I would like to note that 2.1 Ghz on Elemental was not too stable for me, so I ran that on 2.0 Ghz. Anyway - i don't have any issues with my kernel, no overheating, battery lasts 100% same as stock frequency, no reboots, everything works as it's ment to work. If you really want to run on that frequency, make sure you set your voltage table to match your CPU clocks. Undervolting is not a good idea on such high clocks, so you might want to raise your voltages for higher frequencies a bit
monrokhoury said:
Overclocking the CPU in any system usually results in 2 main things:
a. Significantly shorter battery life.
b. heating issues.
sometimes (less frequently) you might experience a crash and fc here and there.
So yeah, it won't be all rainbows and butterflies.
PS: you probably won't reap the benefits of your now overclocked CPU without an app like no frills CPU or kernel Aduitor. Your device's performance isn't just about its CPU frequency, there's the min Max frequency your system is allowed to utilize, the CPU governor, and the I/o scheduler..
and
PPS: don't and I repeat DO NOT go anywhere near 3 GHz.
good luck.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
ok mate
yeah i could raise also min clocks might turn that a noch up
just was wondering if it was possible without any harms
there are now on 384mhz 1 core is always active and 3 others are sleeping aid64 tells me
the temps are now 29 celcuis for 2.1 ghz
donkeykong1 said:
I'm runnimg 2.1 Ghz OC for over 2 years without any issues. I would like to note that 2.1 Ghz on Elemental was not too stable for me, so I ran that on 2.0 Ghz. Anyway - i don't have any issues with my kernel, no overheating, battery lasts 100% same as stock frequency, no reboots, everything works as it's ment to work. If you really want to run on that frequency, make sure you set your voltage table to match your CPU clocks. Undervolting is not a good idea on such high clocks, so you might want to raise your voltages for higher frequencies a bit
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
yeaah the kernel has those options in aroma installer it set it safe i ques
ill post later some picture's of what ive been doing
good nites
here are some pictures of my sense 7 5.0.2 android system dump of htc one m9 for htc one m7 xD overclocked
some temps and cpu tweaks and ofc of the system (dont mind about the girl on the screenshot its my girlfriend not me iam a boy
btw i removed phone number on call menu cause it's private
Greets Rubenownz
So I recently installed latest weekly RR again hoping it will be fixed of micro shuttering but nope, so here's what happening 1st cpu usage is 100% temperature are reaching 82°c, 2nd the micro shuttering is still there so I opened matlog and here's what I got I hope you guys can help me :silly: thank you very much :highfive:
https://mega.nz/#!fp0nWYga!Z9Sgco0jmB00E0TXHkbxbjIOMjMoy1QV-hk2t-x1gb8
Mataujo said:
So I recently installed latest weekly RR again hoping it will be fixed of micro shuttering but nope, so here's what happening 1st cpu usage is 100% temperature are reaching 82°c, 2nd the micro shuttering is still there so I opened matlog and here's what I got I hope you guys can help me :silly: thank you very much :highfive:
https://mega.nz/#!fp0nWYga!Z9Sgco0jmB00E0TXHkbxbjIOMjMoy1QV-hk2t-x1gb8
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Check your CPU governor. If it's interactive, change it to anything else. The stuttering is caused by thermal throttling. Interactive governor has a bug that causes cpu to max out all the time.
xxBrun0xx said:
Check your CPU governor. If it's interactive, change it to anything else. The stuttering is caused by thermal throttling. Interactive governor has a bug that causes cpu to max out all the time.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I'm using the default settings, it's schedutil
This is really killing me.
I deleted the thermal files to as mentioned in the kernel thread
Core control is enabled rest is disabled.
Just see the temperatures!!!
I had the same problems and followed the recommended settings in the kernel thread.
No weird things happening when looking at a task manager. It just ran ridiculously hot all the time. Playing downloaded music through Play Music for example would send the CPU temp to ~90 degrees C.
Back to stock kernel on lineage OS and cool as a cucumber.
Mataujo said:
This is really killing me.
I deleted the thermal files to as mentioned in the kernel thread
Core control is enabled rest is disabled.
Just see the temperatures!!!
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Click to collapse
That's the opposite of what you want. Disable core control, enable msm_thermal. The phone gets warm, but never hot. Also, underclocking dragonxia kernel is VERY important.
xxBrun0xx said:
That's the opposite of what you want. Disable core control, enable msm_thermal. The phone gets warm, but never hot. Also, underclocking dragonxia kernel is VERY important.
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Click to collapse
I don't see any option for msm_thermal where do I find it?
xxBrun0xx said:
That's the opposite of what you want. Disable core control, enable msm_thermal. The phone gets warm, but never hot. Also, underclocking dragonxia kernel is VERY important.
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Click to collapse
Actually in the dragonxia kernel thread, it says to keep core control enabled.
FusionGhana on AKT app
I was experiencing similar issues on RR. Tried all different kinds of options. Thermal files removed (ofcourse that might have attributed to the hotness of the device since CPU was going crazy). Wanted to follow the instructions on another thread that talked about Insane speeds but couldn't since it talked about setting onDemand Governor and somehow my device does not have that.
Then I started playing around with the Balanced profiles using Advanced Kernel Tweaks app. I am currently on FusionGhana (i think that's the name), and my device is running smoooth. No lags, the device is cool most of the times.
Try it out, see if that works for you
psychedelicNerd said:
I was experiencing similar issues on RR. Tried all different kinds of options. Thermal files removed (ofcourse that might have attributed to the hotness of the device since CPU was going crazy). Wanted to follow the instructions on another thread that talked about Insane speeds but couldn't since it talked about setting onDemand Governor and somehow my device does not have that.
Then I started playing around with the Balanced profiles using Advanced Kernel Tweaks app. I am currently on FusionGhana (i think that's the name), and my device is running smoooth. No lags, the device is cool most of the times.
Try it out, see if that works for you
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Just be careful not to do this on an EAS kernel. Last I knew there was a bug with the interactive governor that forced CPU to max all cores all the time when interactive is set. Current version of Dragonxia is an EAS kernel and most of the governors in AKT are modified interactive governors.
That being said, I think using less aggressive governors is a great way to reduce the heat. This CPU is very powerful even at lower clock speeds, there's rarely much need to ramp beyond 50% utilization for any real length of time unless you're gaming.
Hmmm. didn't know about this. I am on DragonXia EAS. Not that I know what EAS stands for, but I will try moving to a non-EAS kernel and see if i get any more improvements. Thanks for the info.