Ask Ubuntu Asked on November 28, 2021
I’m on precision 5530, i9, 32GB RAM, SSD, using nvidia drivers. When booting I have no performance issues. But if I suspend then resume I see performance and lag drop considerably.
I saw online this might be cpu throttling, but running cpupower frequency-info
yields
analyzing CPU 0:
driver: intel_pstate
CPUs which run at the same hardware frequency: 0
CPUs which need to have their frequency coordinated by software: 0
maximum transition latency: Cannot determine or is not supported.
hardware limits: 800 MHz - 4.80 GHz
available cpufreq governors: performance powersave
current policy: frequency should be within 800 MHz and 4.80 GHz.
The governor "powersave" may decide which speed to use
within this range.
current CPU frequency: Unable to call hardware
current CPU frequency: 3.80 GHz (asserted by call to kernel)
boost state support:
Supported: yes
Active: yes
It doesn’t seem to be throttled but everything is obviously slow.
I do see that the chrome gpu-process is using up 50-100% CPU, which is suggestive.
I didn’t have this problem on 18.10.
What might cause this and how can I debug and fix?
It could be related to this bug: https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/linux/+bug/671932.
What have done each time it's reproduced that I restarted the thermald
service:
sudo systemctl restart thermald.service
Answered by Fmaatoug on November 28, 2021
Use sudo -H gedit /lib/systemd/system-sleep/custom-xhci_hcd
Copy these lines into the editor:
#!/bin/bash
# Original script was using /bin/sh but shellcheck reporting warnings.
# NAME: custom-xhci_hcd
# PATH: /lib/systemd/system-sleep
# CALL: Called from SystemD automatically
# DESC: Suspend broken for USB3.0 as of Oct 25/2018 various kernels all at once
# DATE: Oct 28 2018.
# NOTE: From comment #61 at: https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/linux/+bug/522998
TMPLIST=/tmp/xhci-dev-list
# Original script was: case "${1}" in hibernate|suspend)
case $1/$2 in
pre/*)
echo "$0: Going to $2..."
echo -n '' > $TMPLIST
for i in `ls /sys/bus/pci/drivers/xhci_hcd/ | egrep '[0-9a-z]+:[0-9a-z]+:.*$'`; do
# Unbind xhci_hcd for first device XXXX:XX:XX.X:
echo -n "$i" | tee /sys/bus/pci/drivers/xhci_hcd/unbind
echo "$i" >> $TMPLIST
done
;;
post/*)
echo "$0: Waking up from $2..."
for i in `cat $TMPLIST`; do
# Bind xhci_hcd for first device XXXX:XX:XX.X:
echo -n "$i" | tee /sys/bus/pci/drivers/xhci_hcd/bind
done
rm $TMPLIST
;;
esac
Save the file and exit the editor. Then use:
sudo chmod a+x /lib/systemd/system-sleep/custom-xhci_hcd
After rebooting your suspend / resume issues will hopefully be resolved. If not let me know and I'll delete this answer.
These tiny SSD's pack a powerful punch but require special attention in regards to suspend/resume as per this bug report. Edit the file /etc/default/grub
and search for this line:
GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX_DEFAULT="quiet splash ... acpiphp.disable=1 pcie_aspm=force"
Don't add the ... but some place after the other parameters add acpiphp.disable=1
. Do not add the acpi_aspm=force
though unless adding the first option alone doesn't work.
Save the file and use sudo update-grub
. Then reboot to test.
Answered by WinEunuuchs2Unix on November 28, 2021
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