(24-May-2022, 12:14 PM)hkphantomgtr Wrote: Yes, now I have my NUC. In the CMOS there is an option to turn on/off "High Precision Event Timer". Your help will be highly appreciated, again.
Can you run the following command, and tell me what it says? Also generate a diagnostics file and send it to the specified email so I can check the logs
(24-May-2022, 12:14 PM)hkphantomgtr Wrote: Yes, now I have my NUC. In the CMOS there is an option to turn on/off "High Precision Event Timer". Your help will be highly appreciated, again.
Can you run the following command, and tell me what it says? Also generate a diagnostics file and send it to the specified email so I can check the logs
So it looks like you only have the above two as your clock source. I believe TSC is pretty good as well, so that's worth a try
(30-May-2022, 10:47 PM)hkphantomgtr Wrote: And I've emailed the diagnostic file to the specific email a/c. Please take your time.
See this in the system logs:
Code:
hpet: HPET dysfunctional in PC10. Force disabled.
Look in your ACPI or power saving and see if you can disable PC10 state, play around with CPU states and see if you can disable just that, failing that you might need to disable power saving entirely Doing so should get HPET back after a reboot. Let me know how it goes.
So it looks like you only have the above two as your clock source. I believe TSC is pretty good as well, so that's worth a try
(30-May-2022, 10:47 PM)hkphantomgtr Wrote: And I've emailed the diagnostic file to the specific email a/c. Please take your time.
See this in the system logs:
Code:
hpet: HPET dysfunctional in PC10. Force disabled.
Look in your ACPI or power saving and see if you can disable PC10 state, play around with CPU states and see if you can disable just that, failing that you might need to disable power saving entirely Doing so should get HPET back after a reboot. Let me know how it goes.
Thanks, AK! You're right. After disabling the power control setting (disabling "Dynamic Power Technology" , or mainly "OS ACPI C2 Report"), my HPET is back, at the expense of lower temperature, and the low latency value. I really like the HPET sound as the sound is more vivid, with better focus, much better transition, more "on-beat", and denser texture. In short, more holographic.
So it looks like you only have the above two as your clock source. I believe TSC is pretty good as well, so that's worth a try
(30-May-2022, 10:47 PM)hkphantomgtr Wrote: And I've emailed the diagnostic file to the specific email a/c. Please take your time.
See this in the system logs:
Code:
hpet: HPET dysfunctional in PC10. Force disabled.
Look in your ACPI or power saving and see if you can disable PC10 state, play around with CPU states and see if you can disable just that, failing that you might need to disable power saving entirely Doing so should get HPET back after a reboot. Let me know how it goes.
Thanks, AK! You're right. After disabling the power control setting (disabling "Dynamic Power Technology" , or mainly "OS ACPI C2 Report"), my HPET is back, at the expense of lower temperature, and the low latency value. I really like the HPET sound as the sound is more vivid, with better focus, much better transition, more "on-beat", and denser texture. In short, more holographic.
To further my findings, with the same CMOS setting, after changing to "TSC" clocksource, the latency becomes as good as before. huh.... so, with my new NUC, seems the CMOS setting doesn't affect the latency, but the choice of "clocksource".
And last night, in a second thought, it's quite strange to me that, even in the default CMOS setting, including HPET is enabled, the Snakeoil OS can't use HPET, or the system/hardware can't use HPET with the CMOS default power management setting...... so where is the problem?
(01-Jun-2022, 11:46 PM)hkphantomgtr Wrote: To further my findings, with the same CMOS setting, after changing to "TSC" clocksource, the latency becomes as good as before. huh.... so, with my new NUC, seems the CMOS setting doesn't affect the latency, but the choice of "clocksource".
On some motherboards, I honestly can't discern any notable difference between HPET and TSC. IIRC need to disable hyper-threading.
I believe one is the older technology, and less "accurate" under certain conditions, and the other is meant to be a replacement. If memory serves, HPET is meant to be a replacement for TSC (could be the other way round though ).
(01-Jun-2022, 11:46 PM)hkphantomgtr Wrote: And last night, in a second thought, it's quite strange to me that, even in the default CMOS setting, including HPET is enabled, the Snakeoil OS can't use HPET, or the system/hardware can't use HPET with the CMOS default power management setting...... so where is the problem?
HPET is disabled in the kernel. There's apparently some problems with HPET when in C10 mode (power saving mode), so the kernel disables the HPET timer (and falls back to TSC IIRC). So even though HPET is enabled in the system BIOS, the OS will refuse to use it.
If you're using custom kernels, power saving is disabled by default so HPET is always working. Using stock linux kernels, full suite of power saving is enabled hence you may get that missing HPET.
(01-Jun-2022, 11:46 PM)hkphantomgtr Wrote: To further my findings, with the same CMOS setting, after changing to "TSC" clocksource, the latency becomes as good as before. huh.... so, with my new NUC, seems the CMOS setting doesn't affect the latency, but the choice of "clocksource".
On some motherboards, I honestly can't discern any notable difference between HPET and TSC. IIRC need to disable hyper-threading.
I believe one is the older technology, and less "accurate" under certain conditions, and the other is meant to be a replacement. If memory serves, HPET is meant to be a replacement for TSC (could be the other way round though ).
(01-Jun-2022, 11:46 PM)hkphantomgtr Wrote: And last night, in a second thought, it's quite strange to me that, even in the default CMOS setting, including HPET is enabled, the Snakeoil OS can't use HPET, or the system/hardware can't use HPET with the CMOS default power management setting...... so where is the problem?
HPET is disabled in the kernel. There's apparently some problems with HPET when in C10 mode (power saving mode), so the kernel disables the HPET timer (and falls back to TSC IIRC). So even though HPET is enabled in the system BIOS, the OS will refuse to use it.
If you're using custom kernels, power saving is disabled by default so HPET is always working. Using stock linux kernels, full suite of power saving is enabled hence you may get that missing HPET.
O... I c. Thanks for your explanation. Now I understand more.
BTW, I've already disabled hyper-threading. Have a nice day!
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