This tool was originally developed to fix Linux CPU throttling issues affecting Lenovo T480 / T480s / X1C6 as described here.
The CPU package power limit (PL1/2) is forced to a value of 44 W (29 W on battery) and the temperature trip point to 95 'C (85 'C on battery) by overriding default values in MSR and MCHBAR every 5 seconds (30 on battery) to block the Embedded Controller from resetting these values to default.
On systems where the EC doesn't reset the values (ex: ASUS Zenbook UX430UNR), the power limit can be altered by using the official intel_rapl driver (see Static fix for more information)
Warning!
The latest commit (30 Oct 2021) switched from the legacy name lenovo_fix for the tool/config/system to a more uniform throttled. The install script was updated, but please report back if anything breaks.
Tested hardware
Other users have confirmed that the tool is also working for these laptops:
Lenovo T470s, T480, T480s, X1C5, X1C6, X1C8, T580, L590, L490, L480, T470, X280, ThinkPad Anniversary Edition 25, E590 w/ RX 550X, P43s, E480, E580, T14 Gen 1, P14s Gen 1, T15 Gen 1, P15s Gen 1, E14 Gen 2
Dell XPS 9365, 9370, 9550, 7390 2-in-1, Latitude 7390 2-in-1, Inspiron 16 Plus 7620
I suggest you to use the excellent s-tui tool to check and monitor the CPU usage, frequency, power and temperature under load!
Undervolt
The tool supports undervolting the CPU by configuring voltage offsets for CPU, cache, GPU, System Agent and Analog I/O planes. The tool will re-apply undervolt on resume from standby and hibernate by listening to DBus signals. You can now either use the UNDERVOLT key in config to set global values or the UNDERVOLT.AC and UNDERVOLT.BATTERY keys to selectively set undervolt values for the two power profiles.
===== Notice that undervolt is typically locked from 10th gen onwards! =====
IccMax (EXPERTS ONLY)
The tool now supports overriding the IccMax by configuring the maximum allowed current for CPU, cache and GPU planes. The tool will re-apply IccMax on resume from standby and hibernate. You can now either use the ICCMAX key in config to set global values or the ICCMAX.AC and ICCMAX.BATTERY keys to selectively set current values for the two power profiles. NOTE: the values specified in the config file are the actual current limit of your system, so those are not a offset from the default values as for the undervolt. As such, you should first find your system default values with the --monitor command.
HWP override (EXPERIMENTAL)
I have found that under load my CPU was not always hitting max turbo frequency, in particular when using one/two cores only. For instance, when running prime95 (1 core, test #1) my CPU is limited to about 3500 MHz over the theoretical 4000 MHz maximum. The reason is the value for the HWP energy performance hints. By default TLP sets this value to balance_performance on AC in order to reduce the power consumption/heat in idle. By setting this value to performance I was able to reach 3900 MHz in the prime95 single core test, achieving a +400 MHz boost. Since this value forces the CPU to full speed even during idle, a new experimental feature allows to automatically set HWP to performance under load and revert it to balanced when idle. This feature can be enabled (in AC mode only) by setting to True the HWP_Mode parameter in the throttled config file : https://github.com/erpalma/throttled/blob/master/etc/throttled.conf#L41 .
I have run Geekbench 4 and now I can get a score of 5391/17265! On balance_performance I can reach only 4672/16129, so 15% improvement in single core and 7% in multicore, not bad ;)
setting cTDP (EXPERIMENTAL)
On a lot of modern CPUs from Intel one can configure the TDP up or down based on predefined profiles. This is what this option does. For a i7-8650U normal would be 15W, up profile is setting it to 25W and down to 10W. You can lookup the values of your CPU at the Intel product website.
Requirements
A stripped down version of the python module python-periphery is now built-in and it is used for accessing the MCHBAR register by memory mapped I/O. You also need dbus and gobject python bindings for listening to dbus signals on resume from sleep/hibernate.
Writing to MSR and PCI BAR
Some time ago a feature called Kernel Lockdown was added to Linux. Kernel Lockdown automatically enables some security measures when Secure Boot is enabled, among them restricted access to MSR and PCI BAR via /dev/mem, which this tool requires. There are two ways to get around this: You can either disable Secure Boot in your firmware settings, or disable the Kernel Lockdown LSM.
The LSM can be disabled this way: Check the contents of the file /sys/kernel/security/lsm (example contents: capability,lockdown,yama). Take the contents of the file, remove lockdown and add the rest as a kernel parameter, like this: lsm=capability,yama. Reboot and Kernel Lockdown will be disabled!
As of Linux 5.9, kernel messages will be logged whenever the script writes to MSR registers. These aren't a problem for now, but there's some indication that future kernels may restrict MSR writes from userspace by default. This is being tracked by issue #215. The messages will look something like:
[ 324.833543] msr: Write to unrecognized MSR 0x1a2 by python3
Please report to x86@kernel.org
Note that some kernels (e.g. linux-hardened) will prevent from writing to /dev/mem too. Specifically, you need a kernel with CONFIG_DEVMEM and CONFIG_X86_MSR set.
Thermald
As discovered by DEvil0000 the Linux Thermal Monitor (thermald) can conflict with the purpose of this tool. In particular, thermald might be pre-installed (e.g. on Ubuntu) and configured in such a way to keep the CPU temperature below a certain threshold (~80 'C) by applying throttling or messing up with RAPL or other CPU-specific registers. I strongly suggest to either disable/uninstall it or to review its default configuration.
Update
The tool is now running with Python3 by default (tested w/ 3.6) and a virtualenv is automatically created in /opt/throttled. Python2 should probably still work.
If you want to keep it disabled even after a package update you should also run:
sudo systemctl mask thermald.service
In order to check if the service is well started, you could run:
systemctl status throttled
Fedora
A copr repository is available and can be used as detailed below. You can find the configuration installed at /etc/throttled.conf. The issue tracker for this packaging is available here.
rc-service throttled stop
rc-update del throttled default
If you also need to remove the tool from the system:
rm -rf /opt/throttled /etc/systemd/system/throttled.service
# to purge also the config file
rm /etc/throttled.conf
On Arch you should probably use pacman -R lenovo-throttling-fix-git instead.
Update
If you update the tool you should manually check your config file for changes or additional features and modify it accordingly. The update process is then as simple as:
The configuration has moved to /etc/throttled.conf. Makefile does not overwrite your previous config file, so you need to manually check for differences in config file structure when updating the tool. If you want to overwrite the config with new defaults just issue sudo cp etc/throttled.conf /etc. There exist two profiles AC and BATTERY and the tool can be totally disabled by setting Enabled: False in the GENERAL section. Undervolt is applied if any voltage plane in the config file (section UNDERVOLT) was set. Notice that the offset is in mV and only undervolting (i.e. negative values) is supported.
All fields accept floating point values as well as integers.
My T480s with i7-8550u is stable with:
[UNDERVOLT]
# CPU core voltage offset (mV)
CORE: -105
# Integrated GPU voltage offset (mV)
GPU: -85
# CPU cache voltage offset (mV)
CACHE: -105
# System Agent voltage offset (mV)
UNCORE: -85
# Analog I/O voltage offset (mV)
ANALOGIO: 0
IMPORTANT: Please notice that my system is stable with these values. Your notebook might crash even with slight undervolting! You should test your system and slowly incresing undervolt to find the maximum stable value for your CPU. You can check this tutorial if you don't know where to start.
Monitoring
With the flag --monitor the tool constantly monitors the throttling status, indicating the cause among thermal limit, power limit, current limit or cross-origin. The last cause is often related to an external event (e.g. by the GPU). The update rate can be adjusted and defaults to 1 second. Example output:
./throttled.py --monitor
[I] Detected CPU architecture: Intel Kaby Lake (R)
[I] Loading config file.
[I] Starting main loop.
[D] Undervolt offsets: CORE: -105.00 mV | GPU: -85.00 mV | CACHE: -105.00 mV | UNCORE: -85.00 mV | ANALOGIO: 0.00 mV
[D] IccMax: CORE: 64.00 A | GPU: 31.00 A | CACHE: 6.00 A
[D] Realtime monitoring of throttling causes:
[AC] Thermal: OK - Power: OK - Current: OK - Cross-domain (e.g. GPU): OK || VCore: 549 mV - Package: 2.6 W - Graphics: 0.4 W - DRAM: 1.2 W
Static Fix
You can alternatively set the power limits using intel_rapl driver (modifying MCHBAR values requires Linux 5.3+). Bear in mind, some embedded controllers (EC) control the power limit values and will reset them from time to time):
# MSR
# PL1
echo 44000000 | sudo tee /sys/devices/virtual/powercap/intel-rapl/intel-rapl:0/constraint_0_power_limit_uw # 44 watt
echo 28000000 | sudo tee /sys/devices/virtual/powercap/intel-rapl/intel-rapl:0/constraint_0_time_window_us # 28 sec
# PL2
echo 44000000 | sudo tee /sys/devices/virtual/powercap/intel-rapl/intel-rapl:0/constraint_1_power_limit_uw # 44 watt
echo 2440 | sudo tee /sys/devices/virtual/powercap/intel-rapl/intel-rapl:0/constraint_1_time_window_us # 0.00244 sec
# MCHBAR
# PL1
echo 44000000 | sudo tee /sys/devices/virtual/powercap/intel-rapl-mmio/intel-rapl-mmio:0/constraint_0_power_limit_uw # 44 watt
# ^ Only required change on a ASUS Zenbook UX430UNR
echo 28000000 | sudo tee /sys/devices/virtual/powercap/intel-rapl-mmio/intel-rapl-mmio:0/constraint_0_time_window_us # 28 sec
# PL2
echo 44000000 | sudo tee /sys/devices/virtual/powercap/intel-rapl-mmio/intel-rapl-mmio:0/constraint_1_power_limit_uw # 44 watt
echo 2440 | sudo tee /sys/devices/virtual/powercap/intel-rapl-mmio/intel-rapl-mmio:0/constraint_1_time_window_us # 0.00244 sec
If you want to change the values automatic on boot you can use systemd-tmpfiles:
# /etc/tmpfiles.d/power_limit.conf
# MSR
# PL1
w /sys/devices/virtual/powercap/intel-rapl/intel-rapl:0/constraint_0_power_limit_uw - - - - 44000000
w /sys/devices/virtual/powercap/intel-rapl/intel-rapl:0/constraint_0_time_window_us - - - - 28000000
# PL2
w /sys/devices/virtual/powercap/intel-rapl/intel-rapl:0/constraint_1_power_limit_uw - - - - 44000000
w /sys/devices/virtual/powercap/intel-rapl/intel-rapl:0/constraint_1_time_window_us - - - - 2440
# MCHBAR
# PL1
w /sys/devices/virtual/powercap/intel-rapl-mmio/intel-rapl-mmio:0/constraint_0_power_limit_uw - - - - 44000000
# ^ Only required change on a ASUS Zenbook UX430UNR
w /sys/devices/virtual/powercap/intel-rapl-mmio/intel-rapl-mmio:0/constraint_0_time_window_us - - - - 28000000
# PL2
w /sys/devices/virtual/powercap/intel-rapl-mmio/intel-rapl-mmio:0/constraint_1_power_limit_uw - - - - 44000000
w /sys/devices/virtual/powercap/intel-rapl-mmio/intel-rapl-mmio:0/constraint_1_time_window_us - - - - 2440
Debug
You can enable the --debug option to read back written values and check if the tool is working properly. At the statup it will also show the CPUs platform info which contains information about multiplier values and features present for this CPU. Additionally the tool will print the thermal status per core which is handy when it comes to figuring out the reason for CPU throttle. Status fields stands for the current throttle reason or condition and log shows if this was a throttle reason since the last interval.
This is an example output:
Auto reload config on changes (unless it's deleted) can be enabled/disabled in the config
[General]
Autoreload = True
A word about manufacturer provided tooling
Tools provided by your notebook manufacturer like Dell Power Manager tend to persist their settings to the system board. If you ever had it running under Windows and activated a cool/quiet/silent/saving profile, this setting will still be active when running linux, throttling your system.
On my Dell Latitude 5591, not even a BIOS reset to manufacturar default killed the active Quiet profile
Disclaimer
This script overrides the default values set by Lenovo. I'm using it without any problem, but it is still experimental so use it at your own risk.
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