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637 lines
22 KiB
637 lines
22 KiB
# ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
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# /etc/tlp.conf - TLP user configuration (version 1.9.0) |
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# See full explanation: https://linrunner.de/tlp/settings |
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# |
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# Copyright (c) 2025 Thomas Koch <linrunner at gmx.net> and others. |
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# SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0-or-later |
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# |
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# Settings are read in the following order: |
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# |
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# 1. Intrinsic defaults |
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# 2. /etc/tlp.d/*.conf - Drop-in customization snippets |
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# 3. /etc/tlp.conf - User configuration (this file) |
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# |
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# Power Profiles: a part of TLP's parameters is divided into two or three |
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# groups: |
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# - performance: parameters ending in _AC are used when AC power is |
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# connected or when the command 'tlp performance' is run. |
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# - balanced: parameters ending in _BAT are used when operating |
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# on battery power or when the command 'tlp balanced' is run. |
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# - power-saver: parameters ending in _SAV are used when the command |
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# 'tlp power-saver' is run. If there is no _SAV parameter available |
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# for a feature, the _BAT parameter will be used instead. |
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# - Any remaining parameters not divided apply to all power profiles. |
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# |
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# Please note: |
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# - If parameters are specified more than once, the last occurrence takes |
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# precedence. This also means that any parameters defined here will take |
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# precedence over any drop-ins. |
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# - You can however, append values to a parameter already defined as intrinsic |
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# default or in a previously read file: use PARAMETER+="add values". |
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# - Important: all parameters are disabled here. Remove the leading '#' if you |
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# want to enable a feature without a default or if you want to set a value |
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# other than the default. |
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# - Parameters must always be specified for all power profiles, i.e. in the |
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# AC, BAT and SAV category (where applicable). If you omit one of them, |
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# the missing profile will receive its value from another profile, since |
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# a change will only occur if different values are defined. |
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# - To completely disable a parameter, use PARAMETER="". |
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# Legend for defaults: |
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# - Default *: intrinsic default that is effective when the parameter is |
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# missing or the line has a leading #'. |
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# - Default <none>: do nothing or use kernel/hardware defaults. |
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# |
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# ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
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# tlp - Parameters for power saving |
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# Set to 0 to disable, 1 to enable TLP. |
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# Default: 1 |
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#TLP_ENABLE=1 |
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# Set to 1 to deactivate all intrinsic defaults of TLP. This means that |
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# TLP only applies settings that have been explicitly activated i.e. |
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# parameters without a leading '#'. |
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# Notes: |
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# - Helpful if one wants to use only selected features of TLP |
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# - After activation, use tlp-stat -c to display your effective configuration |
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#TLP_DISABLE_DEFAULTS=1 |
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# Control how warnings about invalid settings are issued: |
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# 0=disabled |
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# 1=background tasks (boot, resume, change of power source) report to syslog |
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# 2=shell commands report to the terminal (stderr) |
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# 3=combination of 1 and 2 |
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# Default: 3 |
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#TLP_WARN_LEVEL=3 |
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# Colorize error, warning, notice and success messages. Colors are specified |
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# with ANSI codes: |
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# 1=bold black, 90=grey, 91=red, 92=green, 93=yellow, 94=blue, 95=magenta, |
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# 96=cyan, 97=white. |
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# Other colors are possible, refer to: |
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# https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ANSI_escape_code#3-bit_and_4-bit |
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# Colors must be specified in the order |
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# "<error> <warning> <notice> <success>". |
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# By default, errors are shown in red, warnings in yellow, notices in bold |
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# and success in green. |
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# Default: "91 93 1 92" |
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#TLP_MSG_COLORS="91 93 1 92" |
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# Control automatic switching of the power profile when connecting or removing |
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# the charger, when booting the system or when executing 'tlp start': |
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# 0=disabled - never switch, use TLP_DEFAULT_MODE if configured |
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# 1=auto - always switch, select performance on AC and |
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# balanced on battery power. |
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# 2=smart - do not switch if the following profiles were active previously: |
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# power-saver or balanced on AC resp. |
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# power-saver or performance on battery power. |
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# Note: the same applies if the charger was connected/removed during suspend. |
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# Default: 2 |
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#TLP_AUTO_SWITCH=2 |
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# Power profile to use when automatic switching is disabled |
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# (TLP_AUTO_SWITCH=0), profile is locked (TLP_PERSISTENT_DEFAULT=1) |
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# or no power supply is detected: |
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# PRF=performance, BAL=balanced, SAV=power-saver. |
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# Note: legacy values AC and BAT continue to work. They are mapped to |
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# PRF and BAL, respectively. |
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# Default: <none> |
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#TLP_DEFAULT_MODE=BAL |
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# Lock power profile: |
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# 0=profile depends on automatic switching, |
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# 1=profile is locked to TLP_DEFAULT_MODE (TLP_AUTO_SWITCH is ignored). |
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# Default: 0 |
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#TLP_PERSISTENT_DEFAULT=0 |
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# Power supply classes to ignore when determining power profile: |
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# AC, USB, BAT. |
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# Separate multiple classes with spaces. |
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# Note: try on laptops where operation mode AC/BAT is incorrectly detected. |
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# Default: <none> |
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#TLP_PS_IGNORE="BAT" |
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# Seconds laptop mode has to wait after the disk goes idle before doing a |
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# sync. Non-zero value enables, zero disables laptop mode. |
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# Default: 0 (AC), 2 (BAT) |
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#DISK_IDLE_SECS_ON_AC=0 |
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#DISK_IDLE_SECS_ON_BAT=2 |
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# Dirty page values (timeouts in secs). |
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# Default: 15 (AC), 60 (BAT) |
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#MAX_LOST_WORK_SECS_ON_AC=15 |
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#MAX_LOST_WORK_SECS_ON_BAT=60 |
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# Select a CPU scaling driver operation mode. |
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# Intel CPU with intel_pstate driver: |
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# active, passive. |
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# AMD Zen 2 or newer CPU with amd-pstate driver as of kernel 6.3/6.4(*): |
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# active, passive, guided(*). |
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# Default: <none> |
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#CPU_DRIVER_OPMODE_ON_AC=active |
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#CPU_DRIVER_OPMODE_ON_BAT=active |
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#CPU_DRIVER_OPMODE_ON_SAV=active |
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# Select a CPU frequency scaling governor. |
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# Intel CPU with intel_pstate driver or |
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# AMD CPU with amd-pstate driver in active mode ('amd-pstate-epp'): |
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# performance, powersave(*). |
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# Intel CPU with intel_pstate driver in passive mode ('intel_cpufreq') or |
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# AMD CPU with amd-pstate driver in passive or guided mode ('amd-pstate') or |
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# Intel, AMD and other CPU brands with acpi-cpufreq driver: |
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# conservative, ondemand(*), userspace, powersave, performance, schedutil(*) |
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# Use tlp-stat -p to show the active driver and available governors. |
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# Important: |
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# Governors marked (*) above are power efficient for *almost all* workloads |
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# and therefore kernel and most distributions have chosen them as defaults. |
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# You should have done your research about advantages/disadvantages *before* |
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# changing the governor. |
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# Default: <none> |
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#CPU_SCALING_GOVERNOR_ON_AC=performance |
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#CPU_SCALING_GOVERNOR_ON_BAT=powersave |
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#CPU_SCALING_GOVERNOR_ON_SAV=powersave |
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# Set the min/max frequency available for the scaling governor. |
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# Possible values depend on your CPU. For available frequencies see |
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# the output of tlp-stat -p. |
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# Notes: |
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# - Min/max frequencies must always be specified for both AC *and* BAT |
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# - Not recommended for use with the intel_pstate driver, use |
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# CPU_MIN/MAX_PERF_ON_AC/BAT below instead |
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# Default: <none> |
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#CPU_SCALING_MIN_FREQ_ON_AC=0 |
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#CPU_SCALING_MAX_FREQ_ON_AC=0 |
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#CPU_SCALING_MIN_FREQ_ON_BAT=0 |
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#CPU_SCALING_MAX_FREQ_ON_BAT=0 |
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#CPU_SCALING_MIN_FREQ_ON_SAV=0 |
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#CPU_SCALING_MAX_FREQ_ON_SAV=0 |
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# Set CPU energy/performance policies EPP and EPB: |
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# performance, balance_performance, default, balance_power, power. |
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# Values are given in order of increasing power saving. |
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# Requires: |
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# * Intel CPU |
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# EPP: Intel Core i 6th gen. or newer CPU with intel_pstate driver |
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# EPB: Intel Core i 2nd gen. or newer CPU with intel_pstate driver |
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# EPP and EPB are mutually exclusive: when EPP is available, Intel CPUs |
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# will not honor EPB. Only the matching feature will be applied by TLP. |
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# * AMD Zen 2 or newer CPU |
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# EPP: amd-pstate driver in active mode ('amd-pstate-epp') as of kernel 6.3 |
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# Default: balance_performance (AC), balance_power (BAT), power (SAV) |
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#CPU_ENERGY_PERF_POLICY_ON_AC=balance_performance |
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#CPU_ENERGY_PERF_POLICY_ON_BAT=balance_power |
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#CPU_ENERGY_PERF_POLICY_ON_SAV=power |
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# Set Intel CPU P-state performance: 0..100 (%). |
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# Limit the max/min P-state to control the power dissipation of the CPU. |
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# Values are stated as a percentage of the available performance. |
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# Requires Intel Core i 2nd gen. or newer CPU with intel_pstate driver. |
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# Default: <none> |
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#CPU_MIN_PERF_ON_AC=0 |
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#CPU_MAX_PERF_ON_AC=100 |
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#CPU_MIN_PERF_ON_BAT=0 |
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#CPU_MAX_PERF_ON_BAT=80 |
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#CPU_MIN_PERF_ON_SAV=0 |
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#CPU_MAX_PERF_ON_SAV=60 |
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# Set the CPU "turbo boost" (Intel) or "core performance boost" (AMD) feature: |
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# 0=disable, 1=allow. |
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# Allows to raise the maximum frequency/P-state of some cores if the |
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# CPU chip is not fully utilized and below it's intended thermal budget. |
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# Note: a value of 1 does *not* activate boosting, it just allows it. |
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# Default: <none> |
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#CPU_BOOST_ON_AC=1 |
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#CPU_BOOST_ON_BAT=1 |
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#CPU_BOOST_ON_SAV=0 |
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# Set CPU dynamic boost feature: |
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# 0=disable, 1=enable. |
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# Improve performance by increasing minimum P-state limit dynamically |
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# whenever a task previously waiting on I/O is selected to run. |
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# Requires Intel Core i 6th gen. or newer CPU with intel_pstate driver |
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# in active mode. |
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# Note: AMD CPUs currently have no tunable for this. |
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# Default: <none> |
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#CPU_HWP_DYN_BOOST_ON_AC=1 |
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#CPU_HWP_DYN_BOOST_ON_BAT=1 |
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#CPU_HWP_DYN_BOOST_ON_SAV=0 |
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# Kernel NMI Watchdog: |
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# 0=disable (default, saves power), 1=enable (for kernel debugging only). |
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# Default: 0 |
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#NMI_WATCHDOG=0 |
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# Select platform profile: |
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# performance, balanced, low-power. |
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# Controls system operating characteristics around power/performance levels, |
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# thermal and fan speed. Values are given in order of increasing power saving. |
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# Note: check the output of tlp-stat -p to determine availability on your |
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# hardware and additional profiles such as: balanced-performance, quiet, cool. |
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# Default: performance (AC), balanced (BAT), low-power (SAV) |
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#PLATFORM_PROFILE_ON_AC=performance |
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#PLATFORM_PROFILE_ON_BAT=balanced |
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#PLATFORM_PROFILE_ON_SAV=low-power |
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# System suspend mode: |
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# s2idle: Idle standby - a pure software, light-weight, system sleep state, |
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# deep: Suspend to RAM - the whole system is put into a low-power state, |
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# except for memory, usually resulting in higher savings than s2idle. |
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# CAUTION: changing suspend mode may lead to system instability and even |
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# data loss. As for the availability of different modes on your system, |
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# check the output of tlp-stat -s. If unsure, stick with the system default |
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# by not enabling this. |
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# Default: <none> |
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#MEM_SLEEP_ON_AC=s2idle |
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#MEM_SLEEP_ON_BAT=deep |
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# Define disk devices on which the following DISK/AHCI_RUNTIME parameters act. |
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# Separate multiple devices with spaces. |
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# Devices can be specified by disk ID also (lookup with: tlp diskid). |
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# Default: "nvme0n1 sda" |
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#DISK_DEVICES="nvme0n1 sda" |
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# Disk advanced power management level: 1..254, 255 (max saving, min, off). |
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# Levels 1..127 may spin down the disk; 255 allowable on most drives. |
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# Separate values for multiple disks with spaces. Use the special value 'keep' |
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# to keep the hardware default for the particular disk. |
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# Default: 254 (AC), 128 (BAT) |
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#DISK_APM_LEVEL_ON_AC="254 254" |
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#DISK_APM_LEVEL_ON_BAT="128 128" |
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# Exclude disk classes from advanced power management (APM): |
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# sata, ata, usb, ieee1394. |
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# Separate multiple classes with spaces. |
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# CAUTION: USB and IEEE1394 disks may fail to mount or data may get corrupted |
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# with APM enabled. Be careful and make sure you have backups of all affected |
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# media before removing 'usb' or 'ieee1394' from the denylist! |
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# Default: "usb ieee1394" |
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#DISK_APM_CLASS_DENYLIST="usb ieee1394" |
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# Hard disk spin down timeout: |
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# 0: spin down disabled |
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# 1..240: timeouts from 5s to 20min (in units of 5s) |
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# 241..251: timeouts from 30min to 5.5 hours (in units of 30min) |
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# See 'man hdparm' for details. |
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# Separate values for multiple disks with spaces. Use the special value 'keep' |
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# to keep the hardware default for the particular disk. |
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# Default: <none> |
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#DISK_SPINDOWN_TIMEOUT_ON_AC="0 0" |
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#DISK_SPINDOWN_TIMEOUT_ON_BAT="0 0" |
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# Select I/O scheduler for the disk devices. |
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# Multi queue (blk-mq) schedulers: |
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# mq-deadline(*), none, kyber, bfq |
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# Single queue schedulers: |
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# deadline(*), cfq, bfq, noop |
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# (*) recommended. |
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# Separate values for multiple disks with spaces. Use the special value 'keep' |
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# to keep the kernel default scheduler for the particular disk. |
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# Notes: |
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# - Multi queue (blk-mq) may need kernel boot option 'scsi_mod.use_blk_mq=1' |
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# and 'modprobe mq-deadline-iosched|kyber|bfq' on kernels < 5.0 |
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# - Single queue schedulers are legacy now and were removed together with |
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# the old block layer in kernel 5.0 |
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# Default: keep |
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#DISK_IOSCHED="mq-deadline mq-deadline" |
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# AHCI link power management (ALPM) for SATA disks: |
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# min_power, med_power_with_dipm(*), medium_power, max_performance. |
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# (*) recommended. |
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# Multiple values separated with spaces are tried sequentially until success. |
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# Default: med_power_with_dipm (AC & BAT) |
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#SATA_LINKPWR_ON_AC="med_power_with_dipm" |
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#SATA_LINKPWR_ON_BAT="med_power_with_dipm" |
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# Exclude SATA links from AHCI link power management (ALPM). |
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# SATA links are specified by their host. Refer to the output of |
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# tlp-stat -d to determine the host; the format is "hostX". |
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# Separate multiple hosts with spaces. |
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# Default: <none> |
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#SATA_LINKPWR_DENYLIST="host1" |
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# Runtime Power Management for NVMe, SATA, ATA and USB disks |
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# as well as SATA ports: |
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# on=disable, auto=enable. |
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# Note: SATA controllers are PCIe bus devices and handled by RUNTIME_PM |
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# further down. |
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# Default: on (AC), auto (BAT) |
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#AHCI_RUNTIME_PM_ON_AC=on |
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#AHCI_RUNTIME_PM_ON_BAT=auto |
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# Seconds of inactivity before disk is suspended. |
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# Note: effective only when AHCI_RUNTIME_PM_ON_AC/BAT is activated. |
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# Default: 15 |
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#AHCI_RUNTIME_PM_TIMEOUT=15 |
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# Power off optical drive in UltraBay/MediaBay: 0=disable, 1=enable. |
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# Drive can be powered on again by releasing (and reinserting) the eject lever |
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# or by pressing the disc eject button on newer models. |
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# Note: an UltraBay/MediaBay hard disk is never powered off. |
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# Default: 0 |
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#BAY_POWEROFF_ON_AC=0 |
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#BAY_POWEROFF_ON_BAT=0 |
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# Optical drive device to power off |
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# Default: sr0 |
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#BAY_DEVICE="sr0" |
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# Set the min/max/turbo frequency for the Intel GPU. |
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# Possible values depend on your hardware. For available frequencies see |
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# the output of tlp-stat -g. |
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# Default: <none> |
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#INTEL_GPU_MIN_FREQ_ON_AC=0 |
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#INTEL_GPU_MIN_FREQ_ON_BAT=0 |
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#INTEL_GPU_MAX_FREQ_ON_AC=0 |
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#INTEL_GPU_MAX_FREQ_ON_BAT=0 |
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#INTEL_GPU_BOOST_FREQ_ON_AC=0 |
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#INTEL_GPU_BOOST_FREQ_ON_BAT=0 |
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# AMD GPU power management. |
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# Performance level (DPM): auto, low, high; auto is recommended. |
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# Note: requires amdgpu or radeon driver. |
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# Default: auto |
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#RADEON_DPM_PERF_LEVEL_ON_AC=auto |
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#RADEON_DPM_PERF_LEVEL_ON_BAT=auto |
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# Dynamic power management method (DPM): balanced, battery, performance. |
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# Note: radeon driver only. |
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# Default: <none> |
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#RADEON_DPM_STATE_ON_AC=performance |
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#RADEON_DPM_STATE_ON_BAT=battery |
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# Display panel adaptive backlight modulation (ABM) level: 0(off), 1..4. |
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# Values 1..4 control the maximum brightness reduction allowed by the ABM |
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# algorithm, where 1 represents the least and 4 the most power saving. |
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# Notes: |
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# - Requires AMD Vega or newer GPU with amdgpu driver as of kernel 6.9 |
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# - Savings are made at the expense of color balance |
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# Default: 0 (AC), 1 (BAT), 3 (SAV) |
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#AMDGPU_ABM_LEVEL_ON_AC=0 |
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#AMDGPU_ABM_LEVEL_ON_BAT=1 |
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#AMDGPU_ABM_LEVEL_ON_SAV=3 |
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# Wi-Fi power saving mode: on=enable, off=disable. |
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# Default: off (AC), on (BAT) |
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#WIFI_PWR_ON_AC=off |
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#WIFI_PWR_ON_BAT=on |
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# Disable Wake-on-LAN: Y/N. |
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# Default: Y |
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#WOL_DISABLE=Y |
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# Enable audio power saving for Intel HDA, AC97 devices (timeout in secs). |
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# A value of 0 disables, >= 1 enables power saving. |
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# Note: 1 is recommended for Linux desktop environments with PulseAudio, |
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# systems without PulseAudio may require 10. |
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# Default: 1 |
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# >>> hostname=arch-desktop |
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SOUND_POWER_SAVE_ON_AC=1 |
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SOUND_POWER_SAVE_ON_BAT=1 |
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# <<< |
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# >>> hostname=arch-laptop |
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# SOUND_POWER_SAVE_ON_AC=0 |
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# SOUND_POWER_SAVE_ON_BAT=0 |
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# <<< |
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# Disable controller too (HDA only): Y/N. |
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# Note: effective only when SOUND_POWER_SAVE_ON_AC/BAT is activated. |
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# Default: Y |
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#SOUND_POWER_SAVE_CONTROLLER=Y |
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# PCIe Active State Power Management (ASPM): |
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# default(*), performance, powersave, powersupersave. |
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# (*) keeps BIOS ASPM defaults (recommended) |
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# Default: <none> |
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#PCIE_ASPM_ON_AC=default |
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#PCIE_ASPM_ON_BAT=default |
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# Runtime Power Management for PCIe bus devices: on=disable, auto=enable. |
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# Default: on (AC), auto (BAT) |
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#RUNTIME_PM_ON_AC=on |
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#RUNTIME_PM_ON_BAT=auto |
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# Exclude listed PCIe device adresses from Runtime PM. |
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# Note: this preserves the kernel driver default, to force a certain state |
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# use RUNTIME_PM_ENABLE/DISABLE instead. |
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# Separate multiple addresses with spaces. |
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# Use lspci to get the adresses (1st column). |
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# Default: <none> |
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#RUNTIME_PM_DENYLIST="11:22.3 44:55.6" |
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# Exclude PCIe devices assigned to the listed drivers from Runtime PM. |
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# Note: this preserves the kernel driver default, to force a certain state |
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# use RUNTIME_PM_ENABLE/DISABLE instead. |
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# Separate multiple drivers with spaces. |
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# Default: "mei_me nouveau radeon xhci_hcd", use "" to disable completely. |
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#RUNTIME_PM_DRIVER_DENYLIST="mei_me nouveau radeon xhci_hcd" |
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# Permanently enable/disable Runtime PM for listed PCIe device addresses |
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# (independent of the power source). This has priority over all preceding |
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# Runtime PM settings. Separate multiple addresses with spaces. |
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# Use lspci to get the adresses (1st column). |
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# Default: <none> |
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#RUNTIME_PM_ENABLE="11:22.3" |
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#RUNTIME_PM_DISABLE="44:55.6" |
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# Set to 0 to disable, 1 to enable USB autosuspend feature. |
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# Default: 1 |
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#USB_AUTOSUSPEND=1 |
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# Exclude listed devices from USB autosuspend (separate with spaces). |
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# Use lsusb to get the ids. |
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# Note: input devices (usbhid) and libsane-supported scanners are excluded |
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# automatically. |
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# Default: <none> |
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#USB_DENYLIST="1111:2222 3333:4444" |
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# Exclude audio devices from USB autosuspend: |
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# 0=do not exclude, 1=exclude. |
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# Default: 1 |
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#USB_EXCLUDE_AUDIO=1 |
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# Exclude bluetooth devices from USB autosuspend: |
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# 0=do not exclude, 1=exclude. |
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# Default: 0 |
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#USB_EXCLUDE_BTUSB=0 |
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# Exclude phone devices from USB autosuspend: |
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# 0=do not exclude, 1=exclude (enable charging). |
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# Default: 0 |
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#USB_EXCLUDE_PHONE=0 |
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# Exclude printers from USB autosuspend: |
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# 0=do not exclude, 1=exclude. |
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# Default: 1 |
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#USB_EXCLUDE_PRINTER=1 |
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# Exclude WWAN devices from USB autosuspend: |
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# 0=do not exclude, 1=exclude. |
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# Default: 0 |
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#USB_EXCLUDE_WWAN=0 |
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# Allow USB autosuspend for listed devices even if already denylisted or |
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# excluded above (separate with spaces). Use lsusb to get the ids. |
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# Default: 0 |
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#USB_ALLOWLIST="1111:2222 3333:4444" |
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# Restore radio device state (Bluetooth, WiFi, WWAN) from previous shutdown |
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# on system startup: 0=disable, 1=enable. |
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# Note: the parameters DEVICES_TO_DISABLE/ENABLE_ON_STARTUP/SHUTDOWN below |
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# are ignored when this is enabled. |
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# Default: 0 |
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#RESTORE_DEVICE_STATE_ON_STARTUP=0 |
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# Radio devices to disable on startup: bluetooth, nfc, wifi, wwan. |
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# Separate multiple devices with spaces. |
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# Default: <none> |
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#DEVICES_TO_DISABLE_ON_STARTUP="bluetooth nfc wifi wwan" |
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# Radio devices to enable on startup: bluetooth, nfc, wifi, wwan. |
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# Separate multiple devices with spaces. |
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# Default: <none> |
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#DEVICES_TO_ENABLE_ON_STARTUP="wifi" |
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# Radio devices to enable on AC: bluetooth, nfc, wifi, wwan. |
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# Default: <none> |
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#DEVICES_TO_ENABLE_ON_AC="bluetooth nfc wifi wwan" |
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# Radio devices to disable on battery: bluetooth, nfc, wifi, wwan. |
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# Default: <none> |
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#DEVICES_TO_DISABLE_ON_BAT="bluetooth nfc wifi wwan" |
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# Radio devices to disable on battery when not in use (not connected): |
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# bluetooth, nfc, wifi, wwan. |
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# Default: <none> |
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#DEVICES_TO_DISABLE_ON_BAT_NOT_IN_USE="bluetooth nfc wifi wwan" |
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# Battery Care -- Charge thresholds |
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# Charging starts when the charger is connected and the charge level |
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# is below the start threshold. Charging stops when the charge level |
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# is above the stop threshold. |
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# Required hardware: Lenovo ThinkPads and other laptop brands are driven |
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# via specific plugins: |
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# - Use the tlp-stat -b command to see if a plugin for your hardware is |
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# active and to look up vendor-specific threshold values. Some |
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# laptops support only 1 (on)/0 (off) instead of a percentage level. |
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# - If your hardware supports a start *and* a stop threshold, you must |
|
# specify both, otherwise TLP will refuse to apply the single threshold. |
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# - If your hardware supports only a stop threshold, set the start |
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# value to 0. |
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# - The names of the batteries shown by tlp-stat -b don't have to match |
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# the _BAT0 or _BAT1 parameter qualifiers. Please refer to [2] |
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# 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 |
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# [2] https://linrunner.de/tlp/settings/bc-vendors.html |
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|
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# BAT0: Main battery |
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# Default: <none> |
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|
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# Battery charge level below which charging will begin. |
|
#START_CHARGE_THRESH_BAT0=75 |
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# Battery charge level above which charging will stop. |
|
#STOP_CHARGE_THRESH_BAT0=80 |
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|
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# BAT1: Secondary battery (primary on some laptops) |
|
# Default: <none> |
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|
|
# Battery charge level below which charging will begin. |
|
#START_CHARGE_THRESH_BAT1=75 |
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# Battery charge level above which charging will stop. |
|
#STOP_CHARGE_THRESH_BAT1=80 |
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|
|
# Restore charge thresholds when AC is unplugged: 0=disable, 1=enable. |
|
# Default: 0 |
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|
|
#RESTORE_THRESHOLDS_ON_BAT=1 |
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|
|
# ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
# 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. |
|
# Default: <none> (for all parameters below) |
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|
|
# Radio devices to disable on connect. |
|
|
|
#DEVICES_TO_DISABLE_ON_LAN_CONNECT="wifi wwan" |
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#DEVICES_TO_DISABLE_ON_WIFI_CONNECT="wwan" |
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#DEVICES_TO_DISABLE_ON_WWAN_CONNECT="wifi" |
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|
|
# Radio devices to enable on disconnect. |
|
|
|
#DEVICES_TO_ENABLE_ON_LAN_DISCONNECT="wifi wwan" |
|
#DEVICES_TO_ENABLE_ON_WIFI_DISCONNECT="" |
|
#DEVICES_TO_ENABLE_ON_WWAN_DISCONNECT="" |
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|
|
# 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="" |
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|
|
# Radio devices to enable/disable when undocked. |
|
|
|
#DEVICES_TO_ENABLE_ON_UNDOCK="wifi" |
|
#DEVICES_TO_DISABLE_ON_UNDOCK=""
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|