On Sun, 2012-08-05 at 21:39 +0200, Jeremy Jongepier wrote: > Just added this to the LinuxMusicians Wiki: > http://wiki.linuxmusicians.com/doku.php?id=system_configuration#cpu_frequency_scaling "The command in your /etc/rc.local file only works if you disable the ondemand service. On Debian systems: sudo update-rc.d ondemand disable Another option would be to modify the ondemand init script and rename it to performance: sudo sed -i 's/ondemand/performance/g' /etc/init.d/ondemand sudo update-rc.d ondemand disable sudo cp /etc/init.d/ondemand /etc/init.d/performance sudo update-rc.d performance enable" Last time I used Debian there was a script /etc/init.d/cpufrequtils that set up the governor to ondemand. It's not that long ago, so I guess for Debian this didn't change. Len of course refers to Ubuntu (Studio). AV Linux (Debian) also has got /etc/init.d/cpufrequtils: "[snip] # Set ENABLE to "true" to let the script run at boot time. # # eg: ENABLE="true" # GOVERNOR="ondemand" # MAX_SPEED=1000 # MIN_SPEED=500 ENABLE="true" GOVERNOR="performance" MAX_SPEED="0" MIN_SPEED="0" [snip]" I once wrote a script to toggle between ondemand and performance, not only for the session, but also to keep it for next startup, based on /etc/init.d/cpufrequtils. Regards, Ralf _______________________________________________ Linux-audio-user mailing list Linux-audio-user@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx http://lists.linuxaudio.org/listinfo/linux-audio-user