[coreboot] Coreboot gamers?

Patrick Rudolph siro at das-labor.org
Sun Apr 9 20:25:35 CEST 2017


None of the features you listed are implemented as there's no public documentation how to change those values.
It might be possible to decrease the critical temperature limit, which would reduce CPU clock speed once it gets too hot. Have a look at the t420 mainboard specific configuration.
Regards, Patrick

On April 9, 2017 6:15:18 PM GMT+02:00, Pok Gu <pokgoo002 at gmail.com> wrote:
>I was wondering how to overclock the CPU multiplier or BCLK  or adjust
>vcore voltage using coreboot as most gamer motherboard will do. I'm
>using
>T420 with coreboot, and sometimes the temperature goes too high. I'm
>thinking about lowing vcore may help a bit?
>
>Cheers
>Pok
>
>2017-04-04 22:28 GMT+08:00 Taiidan at gmx.com <Taiidan at gmx.com>:
>
>> On 04/03/2017 08:25 AM, Denis 'GNUtoo' Carikli wrote:
>>
>> On Sun, 2 Apr 2017 16:05:42 -0400
>>> "Taiidan at gmx.com" <Taiidan at gmx.com> wrote:
>>>
>>> Hey any other coreboot gamers?
>>>>
>>> Hi,
>>>
>>> What are your specs, games do you play
>>>> and on what settings?
>>>>
>>> I don't play often, and some of the times, it's to test if the GPU
>>> still works fine. I only play free software games, and I don't have
>>> enough time to investigate games that are not packaged in the
>GNU/Linux
>>> distribution[1] I use.
>>>
>>> As the games I test/play:
>>> - Xonotic
>>> - Supertuxkart
>>>
>>> I like a lot some other games, but they are probably not relevant
>here
>>> because they are not that demanding with reguard to computer
>>> specifications.
>>> For instance Battle for wesnoth doesn't even require 3D
>acceleration...
>>>
>>> I purchased my D16 specifically for IOMMU-GFX VM gaming, I have a
>>>> 6274 with a geforce gtx 780 and the new highly multithreaded games
>>>> work great on it - right now I am playing battlefield 1 and wargame
>>>> red dragon on high settings. I do want to get a 6386 or dual 6328's
>>>> so that I can play older games though due to my CPU's crappy single
>>>> thread performance.
>>>>
>>> In the computers I have[2], the i945 thinkpads are too old to be
>able
>>> to play recent supertuxkart versions on my distribution[1].
>>> I didn't test gaming extensively yet on the Lenovo Thinkpad X200 as
>I
>>> would need to go buy more RAM to do that: 2G of RAM isn't enough to
>>> some of the more demanding games I care about.
>>>
>> You could get an ExpressCard eGPU for your x200 or x220's, I used to
>do
>> that and it works decently.
>>
>>>
>>> I don't have my desktops here, and I don't remember the GPU models,
>I
>>> only know that they are supported by nouveau and work with free
>>> software firmwares. I use fanless GPUs to avoid them making too much
>>> noise.
>>> The nice side effect is that nouveau doesn't need to handle power
>>> management to make use of them efficently.
>>>
>>> I tested supertuxkart on the:
>>> - Asus F2A85-M PRO
>>> - Asus M4A785T-M
>>>
>>> While I'm able to play, the ports are not complete yet and might
>>> require additional hardware such as:
>>> - USB Ethernet card in the case of the F2A85M PRO
>>> - USB Sound card in the case of the M4A785T-M
>>>
>> I have always wondered what comes in to the porting choices of
>people, how
>> come you are porting a 7xx series chipset board instead of an 8xx or
>9xx?
>> (as they are better, newer and support IOMMU)
>> Or why leah had the KGPE-D16 ported and not one of the better newer
>(2014)
>> Supermicro boards with dual northbridge (so way more pci-e lanes to
>go
>> around) and onboard SR-IOV nics. (82576L vs D16's 82574L)
>> Thanks
>>
>>>
>>> Does anyone use Crossfire xDMA? It has dual 2.0 x16 slots and PCI-e
>>>> ACS so it should work (and people have reported it does with the
>>>> vendor bios)
>>>>
>>> It would be interesting to see how the free software linux drivers
>>> handles it too:
>>> - Nouveau doesn't seem to support[3].
>>> - Radeon doesn't seem to support it either[4].
>>>
>> I game in a windows VM, so I would be attaching both cards to it. I
>would
>> be getting radeon as nvidia doesn't like FOSS or IOMMU-GFX on their
>> "consumer" platforms (see the code 43 "bug" they introduced)
>>
>>>
>>> However I wonder if SLI/Crossfire is still stricly required to be
>able
>>> to efficently use several GPU in a computer:
>>> It might be interesting to see if there are (less efficent?) ways to
>>> use several GPUs in the same game with GPU offloading / render
>nodes.
>>>
>>> I personally have 2 nvidia GPUs so it might be worth investigating
>it.
>>>
>>> I would need to add support for the F2A85-M pro for the second pcie
>16x
>>> slot first though.
>>>
>>> References:
>>> -----------
>>> [1]Parabola: https://www.parabola.nu/
>>> [2]https://www.coreboot.org/User:GNUtoo#My_hardware
>>> [3]https://nouveau.freedesktop.org/wiki/FeatureMatrix/
>>> [4]https://www.x.org/wiki/RadeonFeature/
>>> [5]https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/PRIME#PRIME_GPU_offloading
>>>
>>> Denis.
>>>
>>
>>
>> --
>> coreboot mailing list: coreboot at coreboot.org
>> https://www.coreboot.org/mailman/listinfo/coreboot
>>
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