NAME
powerd
—
system power control utility
SYNOPSIS
powerd |
[-a mode]
[-b mode]
[-i percent]
[-m freq]
[-M freq]
[-n mode]
[-p ival]
[-P pidfile]
[-r percent]
[-v ] |
DESCRIPTION
Thepowerd
utility monitors the system state and sets
various power control options accordingly. It offers power-saving modes that
can be individually selected for operation on AC power or batteries.
- maximum
- Choose the highest performance values. May be abbreviated as max.
- minimum
- Choose the lowest performance values to get the most power savings. May be abbreviated as min.
- adaptive
- Attempt to strike a balance by degrading performance when the system appears idle and increasing it when the system is busy. It offers a good balance between a small performance loss for greatly increased power savings. May be abbreviated as adp.
- hiadaptive
- Like adaptive mode, but tuned for systems where performance and interactivity are more important than power consumption. It increases frequency faster, reduces frequency less aggressively, and will maintain full frequency for longer. May be abbreviated as hadp.
The default mode is adaptive for battery power and hiadaptive for the rest.
powerd
recognizes these runtime
options:
-a
mode- Selects the mode to use while on AC power.
-b
mode- Selects the mode to use while on battery power.
-i
percent- Specifies the CPU load percent level when adaptive mode should begin to degrade performance to save power. The default is 50% or lower.
-m
freq- Specifies the minimum frequency to throttle down to.
-M
freq- Specifies the maximum frequency to throttle up to.
-n
mode- Selects the mode to use normally when the AC line state is unknown.
-p
ival- Specifies a different polling interval (in milliseconds) for AC line state and system idle levels. The default is 250 ms.
-P
pidfile- Specifies an alternative file in which the process ID should be stored. The default is /var/run/powerd.pid.
-r
percent- Specifies the CPU load percent level where adaptive mode should consider the CPU running and increase performance. The default is 75% or higher.
-v
- Verbose mode. Messages about power changes will be printed to stdout and
powerd
will operate in the foreground.
SEE ALSO
HISTORY
The powerd
utility first appeared in
FreeBSD 6.0.
AUTHORS
Colin Percival first wrote
estctrl
, the utility that
powerd
is based on. Nate
Lawson then updated it for
cpufreq(4), added features, and wrote this manual page.
BUGS
The powerd
utility should also power down
idle disks and other components besides the CPU.
If powerd
is used with
power_profile, they may override each other.
The powerd
utility should probably use the
devctl(4) interface instead of polling for AC line state.