Ananicy Cpp
system76-scheduler
Ananicy Cpp | system76-scheduler | |
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10 | 24 | |
- | 549 | |
- | 0.9% | |
- | 4.4 | |
- | 18 days ago | |
C++ | Rust | |
GPLv3 | Mozilla Public License 2.0 |
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Ananicy Cpp
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runwhenidle - Linux utility that can automatically pause a computationally-intensive command when user is in front of a computer and resume it when they are away.
For anyone using CPU or IO intensive programs, you can also keep using your desktop, with Cachy OS kernel or Bore scheduler/kernel and Ananicy or ananicy-cpp. Happy gentoo user here, compiling for hours while listening to music/browsing without hiccups.
- TIP: How I doubled my laptop's battery life.
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Did System76 just hint at a possible Arch+PopOS in their latest video?
Btw, anyone have experience with the Zen kernel on Pop! Or know of a good ppa for https://gitlab.com/ananicy-cpp/ananicy-cpp?
- Dynamic double/ triple buffering is ready to be merged
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Pop!_OS Linux gets better game performance and desktop responsiveness
You don't have to anyway. This is a rudimentary and possibly ignorant reimplementation of an established tool, ananicy-cpp. If you want the same (or better) functionality, that tool already exists and is easy to install and use.
- Arch freezing under high disk load, like Steam downloading a game.
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Does it make sense to use 'auto renice' like daemons if your typical workflow use less than 25% CPU most of the time?
If you are interested,there is a program called ananicy-cpp where it set nice values automatically for each app,but this not improve battery life,only prioritize on cpu load.
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Gaming while other things are running?
You can try run ananicy-cpp,is a program that prioritize other programs,say if you are compiling something and gaming,the compiling will have the lowest priority to avoid stuttering the game,and the game will have much priority.
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I really like these feature from KSysGuard, I hope these gets added to Plasma System Monitor
There is a improved version called ananicy-cpp written in C++ instead of python if you are interested.
system76-scheduler
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Three gaming-focused Linux operating systems beat Windows 11 in gaming benchmark
> I don't know what Popos does to make it more "gaming focused" than vanilla Ubuntu.
They have a few changes, chief among them being the PopOS scheduler which I find to be quite effective: https://github.com/pop-os/system76-scheduler
The desktop itself is a weird custom-baked x11/GNOME customization you won't really get on Ubuntu. Not many distributions can claim the title of being truly "unique", but PopOS does deserve the title in my opinion. Even still it wouldn't be my choice for gaming, but I'll defend it's identity as something more than another GNOME/Debian spin.
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Ask HN: New ThinkPad battery life on Ubuntu
Power management kinda doesn't work on Linux. There are very minimal rules once you disconnect from AC, and most of the time you'll switch into high-usage mode when it isn't needed. There's not a clean way to fix this, to my knowledge; the Linux scheduler stack is just kinda based around desktop and server hardware.
That being said, I also use Linux on my Thinkpad anyways. There are decent enough workarounds that I can keep my system up for 5-6 hours when away from AC:
- Switching into battery-saver mode will keep clock speeds down, which generally reduces power usage (as long as you aren't slamming the cores)
- tlp can help if your hardware has power-draining characteristics (I don't use it, my defaults are good enough)
- Using an auto-nicer can keep your system feeling responsive when in power saving mode: https://github.com/pop-os/system76-scheduler
So... caveat emptor, YMMV. Linux is far from the most efficient OS away from the wall, but with a little bit of configuration I feel like my system does indeed work as a "normal laptop".
- What config format do you prefer?
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System76-scheduler 2.0: getting horrible underrunning from seemingly within my interface itself
ran rtcqs as a replacement for realtimeconfigquickscan at the suggestion of Brock from System 76 (thank you Brock ily). As it kept suggesting that I build a custom kernel and I would rather switch back to Windows than do that, I checked github issues on system76-scheduler, found this: https://github.com/pop-os/system76-scheduler/issues/99. Seems to fit with everything I know about the situation.
- System76-Scheduler 2.0
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The Rust Implementation Of GNU Coreutils Is Becoming Remarkably Robust
system76-scheduler
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Nvidia-driver-515-open install error
For starters, you will get better performance using the stock (System76 kernel) but that's another conversation. To solve your specific issue you will need to install the missing dependencies with this command
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How to avoid GNOME getting laggy when system is under heavy CPU use?
And installing and configuring system76-scheduler, it works by allocating the most resources to the window you have in focus, so say a full screen game or a browser you have open. Keep in mind that it only works with the POP-Shell extension and if you don't use it, you will need this one instead.
- Windows 10 is faster out-of-the-box than Ubuntu and Manjaro
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Fedora was added to the geekbench5 benchmark from the previous post due to popular demand. (On metal, Ryzen7 4700U,16GB Dual CH). All are fresh installations. Fedora did 15% lower in the Multi-Core HTML5 test dropping its total score. There is a 5% difference between the top and bottom Multi-Core.
If you start a game with game mode, then system76-scheduler lowers the game priority and makes your FPS lower: https://github.com/pop-os/system76-scheduler/issues/57
What are some alternatives?
Ananicy - Ananicy - is Another auto nice daemon, with community rules support (Use pull request please)
zen-kernel - Zen Patched Kernel Sources
nohang - A sophisticated low memory handler for Linux
shell - Pop!_OS Shell
TT-CPU-Scheduler - Task Type (TT) is an alternative CPU Scheduler for linux.
intel-undervolt - Intel CPU undervolting and throttling configuration tool
distrobox - Use any linux distribution inside your terminal. Enable both backward and forward compatibility with software and freedom to use whatever distribution you’re more comfortable with. Mirror available at: https://gitlab.com/89luca89/distrobox
upower-dbus - Migrated to https://github.com/pop-os/dbus-settings-bindings
muffin - The window management library for the Cinnamon desktop (libmuffin) and its sample WM binary (muffin)
lagmeter
bore-scheduler - BORE (Burst-Oriented Response Enhancer) CPU Scheduler
cfs-zen-tweaks - Tweak Linux CPU scheduler for desktop responsiveness