nvidia-gpu-off
laptop-mode-tools
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nvidia-gpu-off | laptop-mode-tools | |
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9 | 2 | |
124 | 539 | |
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1.8 | 3.6 | |
over 2 years ago | 5 months ago | |
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MIT License | GNU General Public License v3.0 only |
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nvidia-gpu-off
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Few question before trying to switch to linux on my notebook
I'm decently sure it doesn't turn off completely in Windows either. There are ways to completely disable it, but I'd say it's not worth the effort as it only saves a tiny amount of power. If you still insist on manually disabling it, check out this repo.
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Turn off nvidia graphic card?
Already tried this https://github.com/bayasdev/nvidia-gpu-off without success.
- suggestions on low idle power consumption VM server
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The Framework is the most exciting laptop I've ever used
> How did you "power down" your nvidia card?
First I made sure X was working the way I wanted with Intel graphics. There are a handful of ways to do hybrid graphics on Linux, depending on what you want to be able to do, and how old your hardware is. The Arch wiki has some pretty good guides [1] that are helpful even if you're using a different system.
bbswitch seems to work on my system, and the interface is really simple [2]. But there's also this page on the acpi-call thing [3], which suggests that bbswitch is old and unmaintained and that newer systems do something different. From a quick scan, it looks like the Arch wiki also mentions this approach.
As far as drivers go, I know everyone likes to dump on Nvidia for their closed source mess, but in every system I've used with Nvidia hardware (desktops and laptops), I've found that the Nvidia drivers have universally been more reliable than nouveau, so that's what I use.
[1] https://wiki.archlinux.org/title/hybrid_graphics (poke around in "Related Articles" too)
[2] https://github.com/Bumblebee-Project/bbswitch#turn-the-card-...
[3] https://github.com/geminis3/nvidia-gpu-off
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Is there a way disable the RPMFusion Nvidia driver without uninstalling?
Well then, there's this guide I know that might help you.
- A question on design considerations: Will a DGPU always consume power?
- I wrote a guide on how to completely turn off your laptop's Nvidia GPU on Linux using ACPI calls without nvidia-prime
- I wrote a guide on how to completely turn off your laptop's Nvidia GPU on Linux using ACPI calls
laptop-mode-tools
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What's your prebuilt desktop server's idle power?
Keep in mind this isn't the native "Laptop Mode" that is available on Ubuntu (even server). This is the github "Laptop Mode Tools". There are instructions on there which you should read through. The main thing is you need to go through the config files and alter the settings yourself. Each setting has a description on what it does and how to optimise it, so you just have to go 1 by 1. I just went fairly aggressive on a lot of them, which increases latency a bit, but not massive. The worst is when you access files on the spinning drives, it takes 1-2 seconds to spin up and bring the file up.
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A question on design considerations: Will a DGPU always consume power?
- https://github.com/rickysarraf/laptop-mode-tools
What are some alternatives?
throttled - Workaround for Intel throttling issues in Linux.
auto-cpufreq - Automatic CPU speed & power optimizer for Linux
bbswitch - Disable discrete graphics (currently nvidia only)
macOS-Simple-KVM - Tools to set up a quick macOS VM in QEMU, accelerated by KVM.
custom-optimus - A script to help you manage NVIDIA Optimus in Linux laptops
mons - POSIX Shell script to quickly manage monitors on X
UTM - Virtual machines for iOS and macOS
laptop_install - Utils to reinstall a new laptop easily
nvidia-legacy - This repository includes patched legacy nVIDIA drivers for newer Linux kernels (5.8 - 6.6). Works on all Linux distros.
screenrotate - A small script used to automatically change the various Laptops screen rotation