diff --git a/etc/systemd/journald.conf b/etc/systemd/journald.conf index 7575317..ad20b2a 100644 --- a/etc/systemd/journald.conf +++ b/etc/systemd/journald.conf @@ -6,16 +6,18 @@ # any later version. # # Entries in this file show the compile time defaults. Local configuration -# should be created by either modifying this file, or by creating "drop-ins" in -# the journald.conf.d/ subdirectory. The latter is generally recommended. -# Defaults can be restored by simply deleting this file and all drop-ins. +# should be created by either modifying this file (or a copy of it placed in +# /etc/ if the original file is shipped in /usr/), or by creating "drop-ins" in +# the /etc/systemd/journald.conf.d/ directory. The latter is generally +# recommended. Defaults can be restored by simply deleting the main +# configuration file and all drop-ins located in /etc/. # # Use 'systemd-analyze cat-config systemd/journald.conf' to display the full config. # # See journald.conf(5) for details. [Journal] -#Storage=auto +#Storage=persistent #Compress=yes #Seal=yes #SplitMode=uid @@ -30,7 +32,7 @@ SystemMaxUse=256M #RuntimeKeepFree= #RuntimeMaxFileSize= #RuntimeMaxFiles=100 -#MaxRetentionSec= +#MaxRetentionSec=0 MaxFileSec=2week #ForwardToSyslog=no #ForwardToKMsg=no @@ -42,6 +44,7 @@ MaxFileSec=2week #MaxLevelKMsg=notice #MaxLevelConsole=info #MaxLevelWall=emerg +#MaxLevelSocket=debug #LineMax=48K #ReadKMsg=yes #Audit=yes diff --git a/etc/systemd/logind.conf b/etc/systemd/logind.conf index 8fb4278..953d3cc 100644 --- a/etc/systemd/logind.conf +++ b/etc/systemd/logind.conf @@ -6,9 +6,11 @@ # any later version. # # Entries in this file show the compile time defaults. Local configuration -# should be created by either modifying this file, or by creating "drop-ins" in -# the logind.conf.d/ subdirectory. The latter is generally recommended. -# Defaults can be restored by simply deleting this file and all drop-ins. +# should be created by either modifying this file (or a copy of it placed in +# /etc/ if the original file is shipped in /usr/), or by creating "drop-ins" in +# the /etc/systemd/logind.conf.d/ directory. The latter is generally +# recommended. Defaults can be restored by simply deleting the main +# configuration file and all drop-ins located in /etc/. # # Use 'systemd-analyze cat-config systemd/logind.conf' to display the full config. # @@ -22,14 +24,19 @@ #KillExcludeUsers=root #InhibitDelayMaxSec=5 #UserStopDelaySec=10 +#SleepOperation=suspend-then-hibernate suspend HandlePowerKey=ignore +#HandlePowerKeyLongPress=ignore +#HandleRebootKey=reboot +#HandleRebootKeyLongPress=poweroff #HandleSuspendKey=suspend +#HandleSuspendKeyLongPress=hibernate #HandleHibernateKey=hibernate +#HandleHibernateKeyLongPress=ignore #HandleLidSwitch=suspend #HandleLidSwitchExternalPower=suspend #HandleLidSwitchDocked=ignore -#HandleRebootKey=reboot -#HandleRebootKeyLongPress=poweroff +#HandleSecureAttentionKey=secure-attention-key #PowerKeyIgnoreInhibited=no #SuspendKeyIgnoreInhibited=no #HibernateKeyIgnoreInhibited=no @@ -39,7 +46,10 @@ HandlePowerKey=ignore #IdleAction=ignore #IdleActionSec=30min #RuntimeDirectorySize=10% -#RuntimeDirectoryInodesMax=400k +#RuntimeDirectoryInodesMax= #RemoveIPC=yes #InhibitorsMax=8192 #SessionsMax=8192 +#StopIdleSessionSec=infinity +#DesignatedMaintenanceTime= +#WallMessages=yes diff --git a/etc/tlp.conf b/etc/tlp.conf index 7fec70c..2a4e9ba 100644 --- a/etc/tlp.conf +++ b/etc/tlp.conf @@ -1,8 +1,8 @@ -# ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ -# /etc/tlp.conf - TLP user configuration (version 1.7.0) +# ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- +# /etc/tlp.conf - TLP user configuration (version 1.9.0) # See full explanation: https://linrunner.de/tlp/settings # -# Copyright (c) 2024 Thomas Koch and others. +# Copyright (c) 2025 Thomas Koch and others. # SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0-or-later # # Settings are read in the following order: @@ -11,22 +11,37 @@ # 2. /etc/tlp.d/*.conf - Drop-in customization snippets # 3. /etc/tlp.conf - User configuration (this file) # -# Notes: -# - In case of identical parameters, the last occurence has precedence -# - This also means, parameters enabled here will override anything else -# - However you may append values to a parameter already defined as intrinsic -# default or in a previously read file: use PARAMETER+="add values" -# - IMPORTANT: all parameters here are disabled; remove the leading '#' if you -# like to enable a feature without default or have a value different from the -# default -# - Default *: intrinsic default that is effective when the parameter is missing -# or disabled by a leading '#'; use PARAM="" to disable an intrinsic default -# - Default : do nothing or use kernel/hardware defaults -# - IMPORTANT: parameters must always be specified pairwise i.e. for -# both AC and BAT. Omitting one of the two makes the set value effective for -# both power sources, since a change only occurs when different values are -# defined. -# ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ +# Power Profiles: a part of TLP's parameters is divided into two or three +# groups: +# - performance: parameters ending in _AC are used when AC power is +# connected or when the command 'tlp performance' is run. +# - balanced: parameters ending in _BAT are used when operating +# on battery power or when the command 'tlp balanced' is run. +# - power-saver: parameters ending in _SAV are used when the command +# 'tlp power-saver' is run. If there is no _SAV parameter available +# for a feature, the _BAT parameter will be used instead. +# - Any remaining parameters not divided apply to all power profiles. +# +# Please note: +# - If parameters are specified more than once, the last occurrence takes +# precedence. This also means that any parameters defined here will take +# precedence over any drop-ins. +# - You can however, append values to a parameter already defined as intrinsic +# default or in a previously read file: use PARAMETER+="add values". +# - Important: all parameters are disabled here. Remove the leading '#' if you +# want to enable a feature without a default or if you want to set a value +# other than the default. +# - Parameters must always be specified for all power profiles, i.e. in the +# AC, BAT and SAV category (where applicable). If you omit one of them, +# the missing profile will receive its value from another profile, since +# a change will only occur if different values are defined. +# - To completely disable a parameter, use PARAMETER="". +# Legend for defaults: +# - Default *: intrinsic default that is effective when the parameter is +# missing or the line has a leading #'. +# - Default : do nothing or use kernel/hardware defaults. +# +# ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- # tlp - Parameters for power saving # Set to 0 to disable, 1 to enable TLP. @@ -34,10 +49,19 @@ #TLP_ENABLE=1 +# Set to 1 to deactivate all intrinsic defaults of TLP. This means that +# TLP only applies settings that have been explicitly activated i.e. +# parameters without a leading '#'. +# Notes: +# - Helpful if one wants to use only selected features of TLP +# - After activation, use tlp-stat -c to display your effective configuration + +#TLP_DISABLE_DEFAULTS=1 + # Control how warnings about invalid settings are issued: -# 0=disabled, -# 1=background tasks (boot, resume, change of power source) report to syslog, -# 2=shell commands report to the terminal (stderr), +# 0=disabled +# 1=background tasks (boot, resume, change of power source) report to syslog +# 2=shell commands report to the terminal (stderr) # 3=combination of 1 and 2 # Default: 3 @@ -49,34 +73,54 @@ # 96=cyan, 97=white. # Other colors are possible, refer to: # https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ANSI_escape_code#3-bit_and_4-bit -# Colors must be specified in the order " ". +# Colors must be specified in the order +# " ". # By default, errors are shown in red, warnings in yellow, notices in bold # and success in green. # Default: "91 93 1 92" #TLP_MSG_COLORS="91 93 1 92" -# Operation mode when no power supply can be detected: AC, BAT. -# Concerns some desktop and embedded hardware only. +# Control automatic switching of the power profile when connecting or removing +# the charger, when booting the system or when executing 'tlp start': +# 0=disabled - never switch, use TLP_DEFAULT_MODE if configured +# 1=auto - always switch, select performance on AC and +# balanced on battery power. +# 2=smart - do not switch if the following profiles were active previously: +# power-saver or balanced on AC resp. +# power-saver or performance on battery power. +# Note: the same applies if the charger was connected/removed during suspend. +# Default: 2 + +#TLP_AUTO_SWITCH=2 + +# Power profile to use when automatic switching is disabled +# (TLP_AUTO_SWITCH=0), profile is locked (TLP_PERSISTENT_DEFAULT=1) +# or no power supply is detected: +# PRF=performance, BAL=balanced, SAV=power-saver. +# Note: legacy values AC and BAT continue to work. They are mapped to +# PRF and BAL, respectively. # Default: -#TLP_DEFAULT_MODE=AC +#TLP_DEFAULT_MODE=BAL -# Operation mode select: 0=depend on power source, 1=always use TLP_DEFAULT_MODE -# Note: use in conjunction with TLP_DEFAULT_MODE=BAT for BAT settings on AC. +# Lock power profile: +# 0=profile depends on automatic switching, +# 1=profile is locked to TLP_DEFAULT_MODE (TLP_AUTO_SWITCH is ignored). # Default: 0 #TLP_PERSISTENT_DEFAULT=0 -# Power supply classes to ignore when determining operation mode: AC, USB, BAT. +# Power supply classes to ignore when determining power profile: +# AC, USB, BAT. # Separate multiple classes with spaces. # Note: try on laptops where operation mode AC/BAT is incorrectly detected. # Default: #TLP_PS_IGNORE="BAT" -# Seconds laptop mode has to wait after the disk goes idle before doing a sync. -# Non-zero value enables, zero disables laptop mode. +# Seconds laptop mode has to wait after the disk goes idle before doing a +# sync. Non-zero value enables, zero disables laptop mode. # Default: 0 (AC), 2 (BAT) #DISK_IDLE_SECS_ON_AC=0 @@ -96,6 +140,7 @@ # Default: #CPU_DRIVER_OPMODE_ON_AC=active #CPU_DRIVER_OPMODE_ON_BAT=active +#CPU_DRIVER_OPMODE_ON_SAV=active # Select a CPU frequency scaling governor. # Intel CPU with intel_pstate driver or @@ -104,7 +149,7 @@ # Intel CPU with intel_pstate driver in passive mode ('intel_cpufreq') or # AMD CPU with amd-pstate driver in passive or guided mode ('amd-pstate') or # Intel, AMD and other CPU brands with acpi-cpufreq driver: -# conservative, ondemand(*), userspace, powersave, performance, schedutil(*). +# conservative, ondemand(*), userspace, powersave, performance, schedutil(*) # Use tlp-stat -p to show the active driver and available governors. # Important: # Governors marked (*) above are power efficient for *almost all* workloads @@ -113,8 +158,9 @@ # changing the governor. # Default: -#CPU_SCALING_GOVERNOR_ON_AC=powersave +#CPU_SCALING_GOVERNOR_ON_AC=performance #CPU_SCALING_GOVERNOR_ON_BAT=powersave +#CPU_SCALING_GOVERNOR_ON_SAV=powersave # Set the min/max frequency available for the scaling governor. # Possible values depend on your CPU. For available frequencies see @@ -129,6 +175,8 @@ #CPU_SCALING_MAX_FREQ_ON_AC=0 #CPU_SCALING_MIN_FREQ_ON_BAT=0 #CPU_SCALING_MAX_FREQ_ON_BAT=0 +#CPU_SCALING_MIN_FREQ_ON_SAV=0 +#CPU_SCALING_MAX_FREQ_ON_SAV=0 # Set CPU energy/performance policies EPP and EPB: # performance, balance_performance, default, balance_power, power. @@ -141,10 +189,11 @@ # will not honor EPB. Only the matching feature will be applied by TLP. # * AMD Zen 2 or newer CPU # EPP: amd-pstate driver in active mode ('amd-pstate-epp') as of kernel 6.3 -# Default: balance_performance (AC), balance_power (BAT) +# Default: balance_performance (AC), balance_power (BAT), power (SAV) #CPU_ENERGY_PERF_POLICY_ON_AC=balance_performance #CPU_ENERGY_PERF_POLICY_ON_BAT=balance_power +#CPU_ENERGY_PERF_POLICY_ON_SAV=power # Set Intel CPU P-state performance: 0..100 (%). # Limit the max/min P-state to control the power dissipation of the CPU. @@ -155,9 +204,11 @@ #CPU_MIN_PERF_ON_AC=0 #CPU_MAX_PERF_ON_AC=100 #CPU_MIN_PERF_ON_BAT=0 -#CPU_MAX_PERF_ON_BAT=30 +#CPU_MAX_PERF_ON_BAT=80 +#CPU_MIN_PERF_ON_SAV=0 +#CPU_MAX_PERF_ON_SAV=60 -# Set the CPU "turbo boost" (Intel) or "turbo core" (AMD) feature: +# Set the CPU "turbo boost" (Intel) or "core performance boost" (AMD) feature: # 0=disable, 1=allow. # Allows to raise the maximum frequency/P-state of some cores if the # CPU chip is not fully utilized and below it's intended thermal budget. @@ -165,18 +216,21 @@ # Default: #CPU_BOOST_ON_AC=1 -#CPU_BOOST_ON_BAT=0 +#CPU_BOOST_ON_BAT=1 +#CPU_BOOST_ON_SAV=0 # Set CPU dynamic boost feature: # 0=disable, 1=enable. # Improve performance by increasing minimum P-state limit dynamically # whenever a task previously waiting on I/O is selected to run. -# Requires Intel Core i 6th gen. or newer CPU: intel_pstate driver in active mode. +# Requires Intel Core i 6th gen. or newer CPU with intel_pstate driver +# in active mode. # Note: AMD CPUs currently have no tunable for this. # Default: #CPU_HWP_DYN_BOOST_ON_AC=1 -#CPU_HWP_DYN_BOOST_ON_BAT=0 +#CPU_HWP_DYN_BOOST_ON_BAT=1 +#CPU_HWP_DYN_BOOST_ON_SAV=0 # Kernel NMI Watchdog: # 0=disable (default, saves power), 1=enable (for kernel debugging only). @@ -190,10 +244,11 @@ # thermal and fan speed. Values are given in order of increasing power saving. # Note: check the output of tlp-stat -p to determine availability on your # hardware and additional profiles such as: balanced-performance, quiet, cool. -# Default: +# Default: performance (AC), balanced (BAT), low-power (SAV) #PLATFORM_PROFILE_ON_AC=performance -#PLATFORM_PROFILE_ON_BAT=low-power +#PLATFORM_PROFILE_ON_BAT=balanced +#PLATFORM_PROFILE_ON_SAV=low-power # System suspend mode: # s2idle: Idle standby - a pure software, light-weight, system sleep state, @@ -283,8 +338,8 @@ # Runtime Power Management for NVMe, SATA, ATA and USB disks # as well as SATA ports: # on=disable, auto=enable. -# Note: SATA controllers are PCIe bus devices and handled by RUNTIME_PM further -# down. +# Note: SATA controllers are PCIe bus devices and handled by RUNTIME_PM +# further down. # Default: on (AC), auto (BAT) @@ -338,24 +393,17 @@ #RADEON_DPM_STATE_ON_AC=performance #RADEON_DPM_STATE_ON_BAT=battery -# Graphics clock speed (profile method): low, mid, high, auto, default; -# auto = mid on BAT, high on AC. -# Note: radeon driver on legacy ATI hardware only (where DPM is not available). -# Default: default - -#RADEON_POWER_PROFILE_ON_AC=default -#RADEON_POWER_PROFILE_ON_BAT=default - # Display panel adaptive backlight modulation (ABM) level: 0(off), 1..4. # Values 1..4 control the maximum brightness reduction allowed by the ABM # algorithm, where 1 represents the least and 4 the most power saving. # Notes: # - Requires AMD Vega or newer GPU with amdgpu driver as of kernel 6.9 # - Savings are made at the expense of color balance -# Default: 0 (AC), 1 (BAT) +# Default: 0 (AC), 1 (BAT), 3 (SAV) #AMDGPU_ABM_LEVEL_ON_AC=0 -#AMDGPU_ABM_LEVEL_ON_BAT=3 +#AMDGPU_ABM_LEVEL_ON_BAT=1 +#AMDGPU_ABM_LEVEL_ON_SAV=3 # Wi-Fi power saving mode: on=enable, off=disable. # Default: off (AC), on (BAT) @@ -518,23 +566,23 @@ SOUND_POWER_SAVE_ON_BAT=1 # Charging starts when the charger is connected and the charge level # is below the start threshold. Charging stops when the charge level # is above the stop threshold. -# Required hardware: Lenovo ThinkPads and select other laptop brands -# are driven via specific plugins -# - Active plugin and support status are shown by tlp-stat -b -# - Vendor specific threshold levels are shown by tlp-stat -b, some -# laptops support only 1 (on)/ 0 (off) instead of a percentage level -# - When your hardware supports a start *and* a stop threshold, you must -# specify both, otherwise TLP will refuse to apply the single threshold -# - When your hardware supports only a stop threshold, set the start -# value to 0 -# - Older ThinkPads may require an external kernel module, refer to the -# output of tlp-stat -b -# For further explanation and vendor specific details refer to -# - https://linrunner.de/tlp/settings/battery.html -# - https://linrunner.de/tlp/settings/bc-vendors.html - -# BAT0: Primary / Main / Internal battery -# Note: also use for batteries BATC, BATT and CMB0 +# Required hardware: Lenovo ThinkPads and other laptop brands are driven +# via specific plugins: +# - Use the tlp-stat -b command to see if a plugin for your hardware is +# active and to look up vendor-specific threshold values. Some +# laptops support only 1 (on)/0 (off) instead of a percentage level. +# - If your hardware supports a start *and* a stop threshold, you must +# specify both, otherwise TLP will refuse to apply the single threshold. +# - If your hardware supports only a stop threshold, set the start +# value to 0. +# - The names of the batteries shown by tlp-stat -b don't have to match +# the _BAT0 or _BAT1 parameter qualifiers. Please refer to [2] +# to see which qualifier applies to which battery. +# For further explanation and all vendor specific details refer to +# [1] https://linrunner.de/tlp/settings/battery.html +# [2] https://linrunner.de/tlp/settings/bc-vendors.html + +# BAT0: Main battery # Default: # Battery charge level below which charging will begin. @@ -542,8 +590,7 @@ SOUND_POWER_SAVE_ON_BAT=1 # Battery charge level above which charging will stop. #STOP_CHARGE_THRESH_BAT0=80 -# BAT1: Secondary / Ultrabay / Slice / Replaceable battery -# Note: primary on some laptops +# BAT1: Secondary battery (primary on some laptops) # Default: # Battery charge level below which charging will begin. @@ -556,8 +603,9 @@ SOUND_POWER_SAVE_ON_BAT=1 #RESTORE_THRESHOLDS_ON_BAT=1 -# ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ -# tlp-rdw - Parameters for the radio device wizard +# ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- +# tlp-rdw - Radio Device Wizard +# Note: requires installation of the optional package tlp-rdw. # Possible devices: bluetooth, wifi, wwan. # Separate multiple radio devices with spaces. @@ -576,6 +624,9 @@ SOUND_POWER_SAVE_ON_BAT=1 #DEVICES_TO_ENABLE_ON_WWAN_DISCONNECT="" # Radio devices to enable/disable when docked. +# Note: not all docks can be recognized, especially USB-C docks. If a LAN +# cable is connected to the dock, use DEVICES_TO_DISABLE_ON_LAN_CONNECT +# and DEVICES_TO_ENABLE_ON_LAN_DISCONNECT instead. #DEVICES_TO_ENABLE_ON_DOCK="" #DEVICES_TO_DISABLE_ON_DOCK=""