On Mon, 25 Jan 2010, Justin Piszcz wrote:Intel's DP55KG Extreme motherboard, yes I will try changing the c-state later and hopefully that will fix the problem, thanks. Again, the board never makes any noise in the BIOS or Windows or Linux, only when you load the cpufreq-processor module.So the question remains, is it possible to utilize turbo boost (in Linux)
without the high pitch noise from the ACPI processor module?
Well, I am tempted to say you should consider getting a higher quality
motherboard (or, if it is just yours that sing, get it replaced on warranty
as that would mean you got one with bad components).
That said, if Windows can get that motherboard to shut up, so should Linux.
You just need to find the right knob to push that will make the power draw
behaviour more like whatever Windows is doing.
The first good bet is to limit core C-state depth, e.g, to C3 (instead of
C5/C6), and if thet doesn't work, to C2. After that, you can try limiting
package C-states if your BIOS will let you (I don't know if we can do that
distinction in Linux right now... do we?), play with cpufreq limiting the
core frequency changes, etc.
And of course, try all scheduler frequencies, with and without NO_HZ.
What motherboard is this?