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idaanx

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idaanx last won the day on January 6 2023

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  1. The easy suggestion is, stick with what works. ARPL and TCRP have some road ahead before they're as stable and usable as DSM 6 and Jun's loader was. Another solution I can give you, try out a Hypervisor like Proxmox or similar and run your Windows and DSM in separate VMs.
  2. I don't know what tool you're using here, but it shows options that aren't available in DSM, before you break your system don't use this tool in DSM. The governor issues are fixed since the updates from this year, mainly the misc add-on. When updating from within ARPL make sure to also update the add-ons.
  3. When running DSM inside a VM the CPU management is handled by the Host (Proxmox). Since you've disabled Speedstep you might not get you're boost speeds and the rest of its benefits. The processor info is baked into the system and is the CPU info from the model you've chosen.
  4. The governor is now loaded by the system again as intended, as it is on real Synology hardware. No need to load it yourself any longer, ie. the fix I've provided. Run the command below and you'll see it still loads the performance governor by default for all your cores. cat /sys/devices/system/cpu/cpu*/cpufreq/scaling_governor
  5. Just tested it on my main system, on Skylake and VM and now the module is loaded on my main system and not loaded on the other two as aspected. Thanks for the fix 👍 One small issue remains though. The ARPL loader/configurator still has the governor set to userspace with the lowest speed. This is only on the pre-Skylake system, Skylake and up use the intel_pstate driver with different settings, VM doesn't use this at all. The issue with this is that the configurator, the installation itself and the boot is unnecessarily slow, until the acpi-freq module is loaded in DSM. Setting it to 1 of the other 3 available governors will help, if possible. Another possibility is to set the scaling_setspeed inputs to the output of scalling_max_freq. This also has the result of showing this lowest frequency in the Info Center, looks like system is checking the speed before the module is loaded. This is just cosmetic but it is an indication it is still off at boot. I have also set a custom frequency in the configurator and booted from the menu with that frequency being displayed in Info Center and having a faster boot-time.
  6. Same as everyone else. Load the the configurator, and in the ARPL menu go the update option... At the moment beta 9 is the latest, so no need to update.
  7. Could you check if you have Intel Hardware P-state enabled in DSM by running grep flags /proc/cpuinfo | grep -m1 hwp No output means it disabled, with output it should be enabled. If disabled you should check your BIOS and enable Intel Speed Shift, or just might be called Hardware P-state. This allows the CPU to manage the Power states without the need of the OS to do so. My BIOS doesn't have an option to disable it so can't test what happens when it is off. Let me know it goes. Edit: Could you also run a Geekbench test, if you haven't already, maybe it's not related to this issue at all.
  8. There is no output apart from the loader itself, a real Synology doesn't even have a video out.
  9. Do what you want with that answer, I'm out...
  10. No issues with the install no. New idea. echo nameserver 1.1.1.1 >> /etc/resolv.conf And run the nslookup command again.
  11. First part is the file which loads the necessary modules, acpi-cpufreq still has a hash in front of it which normally disables the loading of it. This is done by the misc add-on. The second part, starting with xt_tcpudp are the loaded modules with a filter for the text cpu. As you can see it shows acpi-cpufreq in the second row from the bottom. No clue why it is loaded anyway if you didn't do anything.
  12. Looks like the DNS settings on your ARPL is pointing to itself, don't know why that is. Just wipe the flash drive and flash it again with BalenaEtcher and try again, easier than trying to fix this mess. And if you haven't done so already turn off and on again your router and/or modem.
  13. Where did you check it is 1500 and not 1501? You're still using model 920+ right, I'm wondering how your governor was set to performance? Can you post the result for cat /lib/modules-load.d/70-cpufreq-kernel.conf && lsmod | grep cpu
  14. Just measuring the idle state is a bit pointless. Under some load the 6700 will easily exceed 50+ W, where as the J4105 will most likely stay under 20 W. For my N3150 the difference between idle and full load is only around 3 W, but a 65 W TDP chip like the 6700 will never have that. With the scores you previously posted for the J4105, it is very unlikely you only getting 1.5 GHz. If you're getting reports of the frequency being 1501 in DSM, in reality it is 2500 / 2.5 GHz. Can you post the results for the J4150 with grep . /sys/devices/system/cpu/cpu0/cpufreq/* And can you please answer the question if you used the CPU scaler script on the J4105 or set it manually?
  15. The 3615xs loads the kernel module and sets the governor to performance like it is intended by Synology. Unlike the other models when the misc add-on is enabled, which disables this. There is no difference of setting it yourself with my previously provided command. Like I said Skylake and up don't need a fix and from my testing don't even work with the module. It might even brake your setup when used improperly. I've also told you before the scores for your 6700 look good and it works as intended. If you want to be sure Intel Hardware P-state is enable run the command below, when you get output it is. grep flags /proc/cpuinfo | grep -m1 hwp Any idea how your J4105 got good scores all of a sudden? Do you use the CPU scaler script on it?
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