| Linus Torvalds | 1da177e | 2005-04-16 15:20:36 -0700 | [diff] [blame] | 1 | How to conserve battery power using laptop-mode | 
 | 2 | ----------------------------------------------- | 
 | 3 |  | 
 | 4 | Document Author: Bart Samwel (bart@samwel.tk) | 
 | 5 | Date created: January 2, 2004 | 
| Jesper Juhl | ffd59da | 2006-01-11 01:48:08 +0100 | [diff] [blame] | 6 | Last modified: December 06, 2004 | 
| Linus Torvalds | 1da177e | 2005-04-16 15:20:36 -0700 | [diff] [blame] | 7 |  | 
 | 8 | Introduction | 
 | 9 | ------------ | 
 | 10 |  | 
 | 11 | Laptop mode is used to minimize the time that the hard disk needs to be spun up, | 
 | 12 | to conserve battery power on laptops. It has been reported to cause significant | 
 | 13 | power savings. | 
 | 14 |  | 
 | 15 | Contents | 
 | 16 | -------- | 
 | 17 |  | 
 | 18 | * Introduction | 
 | 19 | * Installation | 
 | 20 | * Caveats | 
 | 21 | * The Details | 
 | 22 | * Tips & Tricks | 
 | 23 | * Control script | 
 | 24 | * ACPI integration | 
 | 25 | * Monitoring tool | 
 | 26 |  | 
 | 27 |  | 
 | 28 | Installation | 
 | 29 | ------------ | 
 | 30 |  | 
 | 31 | To use laptop mode, you don't need to set any kernel configuration options | 
 | 32 | or anything. Simply install all the files included in this document, and | 
 | 33 | laptop mode will automatically be started when you're on battery. For | 
 | 34 | your convenience, a tarball containing an installer can be downloaded at: | 
 | 35 |  | 
| Zach Carter | a3e09756 | 2007-05-08 00:31:35 -0700 | [diff] [blame] | 36 | http://www.samwel.tk/laptop_mode/laptop_mode/ | 
| Linus Torvalds | 1da177e | 2005-04-16 15:20:36 -0700 | [diff] [blame] | 37 |  | 
 | 38 | To configure laptop mode, you need to edit the configuration file, which is | 
 | 39 | located in /etc/default/laptop-mode on Debian-based systems, or in | 
 | 40 | /etc/sysconfig/laptop-mode on other systems. | 
 | 41 |  | 
 | 42 | Unfortunately, automatic enabling of laptop mode does not work for | 
 | 43 | laptops that don't have ACPI. On those laptops, you need to start laptop | 
 | 44 | mode manually. To start laptop mode, run "laptop_mode start", and to | 
 | 45 | stop it, run "laptop_mode stop". (Note: The laptop mode tools package now | 
 | 46 | has experimental support for APM, you might want to try that first.) | 
 | 47 |  | 
 | 48 |  | 
 | 49 | Caveats | 
 | 50 | ------- | 
 | 51 |  | 
 | 52 | * The downside of laptop mode is that you have a chance of losing up to 10 | 
 | 53 |   minutes of work. If you cannot afford this, don't use it! The supplied ACPI | 
 | 54 |   scripts automatically turn off laptop mode when the battery almost runs out, | 
 | 55 |   so that you won't lose any data at the end of your battery life. | 
 | 56 |  | 
 | 57 | * Most desktop hard drives have a very limited lifetime measured in spindown | 
 | 58 |   cycles, typically about 50.000 times (it's usually listed on the spec sheet). | 
 | 59 |   Check your drive's rating, and don't wear down your drive's lifetime if you | 
 | 60 |   don't need to. | 
 | 61 |  | 
 | 62 | * If you mount some of your ext3/reiserfs filesystems with the -n option, then | 
 | 63 |   the control script will not be able to remount them correctly. You must set | 
 | 64 |   DO_REMOUNTS=0 in the control script, otherwise it will remount them with the | 
 | 65 |   wrong options -- or it will fail because it cannot write to /etc/mtab. | 
 | 66 |  | 
 | 67 | * If you have your filesystems listed as type "auto" in fstab, like I did, then | 
 | 68 |   the control script will not recognize them as filesystems that need remounting. | 
 | 69 |   You must list the filesystems with their true type instead. | 
 | 70 |  | 
 | 71 | * It has been reported that some versions of the mutt mail client use file access | 
 | 72 |   times to determine whether a folder contains new mail. If you use mutt and | 
 | 73 |   experience this, you must disable the noatime remounting by setting the option | 
 | 74 |   DO_REMOUNT_NOATIME to 0 in the configuration file. | 
 | 75 |  | 
 | 76 |  | 
 | 77 | The Details | 
 | 78 | ----------- | 
 | 79 |  | 
 | 80 | Laptop mode is controlled by the knob /proc/sys/vm/laptop_mode. This knob is | 
 | 81 | present for all kernels that have the laptop mode patch, regardless of any | 
 | 82 | configuration options. When the knob is set, any physical disk I/O (that might | 
 | 83 | have caused the hard disk to spin up) causes Linux to flush all dirty blocks. The | 
 | 84 | result of this is that after a disk has spun down, it will not be spun up | 
 | 85 | anymore to write dirty blocks, because those blocks had already been written | 
 | 86 | immediately after the most recent read operation. The value of the laptop_mode | 
 | 87 | knob determines the time between the occurrence of disk I/O and when the flush | 
 | 88 | is triggered. A sensible value for the knob is 5 seconds. Setting the knob to | 
 | 89 | 0 disables laptop mode. | 
 | 90 |  | 
 | 91 | To increase the effectiveness of the laptop_mode strategy, the laptop_mode | 
 | 92 | control script increases dirty_expire_centisecs and dirty_writeback_centisecs in | 
 | 93 | /proc/sys/vm to about 10 minutes (by default), which means that pages that are | 
 | 94 | dirtied are not forced to be written to disk as often. The control script also | 
 | 95 | changes the dirty background ratio, so that background writeback of dirty pages | 
 | 96 | is not done anymore. Combined with a higher commit value (also 10 minutes) for | 
 | 97 | ext3 or ReiserFS filesystems (also done automatically by the control script), | 
 | 98 | this results in concentration of disk activity in a small time interval which | 
 | 99 | occurs only once every 10 minutes, or whenever the disk is forced to spin up by | 
 | 100 | a cache miss. The disk can then be spun down in the periods of inactivity. | 
 | 101 |  | 
 | 102 | If you want to find out which process caused the disk to spin up, you can | 
 | 103 | gather information by setting the flag /proc/sys/vm/block_dump. When this flag | 
 | 104 | is set, Linux reports all disk read and write operations that take place, and | 
 | 105 | all block dirtyings done to files. This makes it possible to debug why a disk | 
 | 106 | needs to spin up, and to increase battery life even more. The output of | 
 | 107 | block_dump is written to the kernel output, and it can be retrieved using | 
 | 108 | "dmesg". When you use block_dump and your kernel logging level also includes | 
 | 109 | kernel debugging messages, you probably want to turn off klogd, otherwise | 
 | 110 | the output of block_dump will be logged, causing disk activity that is not | 
 | 111 | normally there. | 
 | 112 |  | 
 | 113 |  | 
 | 114 | Configuration | 
 | 115 | ------------- | 
 | 116 |  | 
 | 117 | The laptop mode configuration file is located in /etc/default/laptop-mode on | 
 | 118 | Debian-based systems, or in /etc/sysconfig/laptop-mode on other systems. It | 
 | 119 | contains the following options: | 
 | 120 |  | 
 | 121 | MAX_AGE: | 
 | 122 |  | 
 | 123 | Maximum time, in seconds, of hard drive spindown time that you are | 
| Matt LaPlante | 5d3f083 | 2006-11-30 05:21:10 +0100 | [diff] [blame] | 124 | comfortable with. Worst case, it's possible that you could lose this | 
| Linus Torvalds | 1da177e | 2005-04-16 15:20:36 -0700 | [diff] [blame] | 125 | amount of work if your battery fails while you're in laptop mode. | 
 | 126 |  | 
 | 127 | MINIMUM_BATTERY_MINUTES: | 
 | 128 |  | 
 | 129 | Automatically disable laptop mode if the remaining number of minutes of | 
 | 130 | battery power is less than this value. Default is 10 minutes. | 
 | 131 |  | 
 | 132 | AC_HD/BATT_HD: | 
 | 133 |  | 
 | 134 | The idle timeout that should be set on your hard drive when laptop mode | 
 | 135 | is active (BATT_HD) and when it is not active (AC_HD). The defaults are | 
 | 136 | 20 seconds (value 4) for BATT_HD  and 2 hours (value 244) for AC_HD. The | 
 | 137 | possible values are those listed in the manual page for "hdparm" for the | 
 | 138 | "-S" option. | 
 | 139 |  | 
 | 140 | HD: | 
 | 141 |  | 
 | 142 | The devices for which the spindown timeout should be adjusted by laptop mode. | 
 | 143 | Default is /dev/hda. If you specify multiple devices, separate them by a space. | 
 | 144 |  | 
 | 145 | READAHEAD: | 
 | 146 |  | 
 | 147 | Disk readahead, in 512-byte sectors, while laptop mode is active. A large | 
 | 148 | readahead can prevent disk accesses for things like executable pages (which are | 
 | 149 | loaded on demand while the application executes) and sequentially accessed data | 
 | 150 | (MP3s). | 
 | 151 |  | 
 | 152 | DO_REMOUNTS: | 
 | 153 |  | 
 | 154 | The control script automatically remounts any mounted journaled filesystems | 
| Matt LaPlante | 3f6dee9 | 2006-10-03 22:45:33 +0200 | [diff] [blame] | 155 | with appropriate commit interval options. When this option is set to 0, this | 
| Linus Torvalds | 1da177e | 2005-04-16 15:20:36 -0700 | [diff] [blame] | 156 | feature is disabled. | 
 | 157 |  | 
 | 158 | DO_REMOUNT_NOATIME: | 
 | 159 |  | 
 | 160 | When remounting, should the filesystems be remounted with the noatime option? | 
 | 161 | Normally, this is set to "1" (enabled), but there may be programs that require | 
 | 162 | access time recording. | 
 | 163 |  | 
 | 164 | DIRTY_RATIO: | 
 | 165 |  | 
 | 166 | The percentage of memory that is allowed to contain "dirty" or unsaved data | 
 | 167 | before a writeback is forced, while laptop mode is active. Corresponds to | 
 | 168 | the /proc/sys/vm/dirty_ratio sysctl. | 
 | 169 |  | 
 | 170 | DIRTY_BACKGROUND_RATIO: | 
 | 171 |  | 
 | 172 | The percentage of memory that is allowed to contain "dirty" or unsaved data | 
 | 173 | after a forced writeback is done due to an exceeding of DIRTY_RATIO. Set | 
 | 174 | this nice and low. This corresponds to the /proc/sys/vm/dirty_background_ratio | 
 | 175 | sysctl. | 
 | 176 |  | 
 | 177 | Note that the behaviour of dirty_background_ratio is quite different | 
 | 178 | when laptop mode is active and when it isn't. When laptop mode is inactive, | 
 | 179 | dirty_background_ratio is the threshold percentage at which background writeouts | 
 | 180 | start taking place. When laptop mode is active, however, background writeouts | 
 | 181 | are disabled, and the dirty_background_ratio only determines how much writeback | 
 | 182 | is done when dirty_ratio is reached. | 
 | 183 |  | 
 | 184 | DO_CPU: | 
 | 185 |  | 
 | 186 | Enable CPU frequency scaling when in laptop mode. (Requires CPUFreq to be setup. | 
 | 187 | See Documentation/cpu-freq/user-guide.txt for more info. Disabled by default.) | 
 | 188 |  | 
 | 189 | CPU_MAXFREQ: | 
 | 190 |  | 
 | 191 | When on battery, what is the maximum CPU speed that the system should use? Legal | 
 | 192 | values are "slowest" for the slowest speed that your CPU is able to operate at, | 
 | 193 | or a value listed in /sys/devices/system/cpu/cpu0/cpufreq/scaling_available_frequencies. | 
 | 194 |  | 
 | 195 |  | 
 | 196 | Tips & Tricks | 
 | 197 | ------------- | 
 | 198 |  | 
 | 199 | * Bartek Kania reports getting up to 50 minutes of extra battery life (on top | 
 | 200 |   of his regular 3 to 3.5 hours) using a spindown time of 5 seconds (BATT_HD=1). | 
 | 201 |  | 
 | 202 | * You can spin down the disk while playing MP3, by setting disk readahead | 
 | 203 |   to 8MB (READAHEAD=16384). Effectively, the disk will read a complete MP3 at | 
 | 204 |   once, and will then spin down while the MP3 is playing. (Thanks to Bartek | 
 | 205 |   Kania.) | 
 | 206 |  | 
 | 207 | * Drew Scott Daniels observed: "I don't know why, but when I decrease the number | 
 | 208 |   of colours that my display uses it consumes less battery power. I've seen | 
 | 209 |   this on powerbooks too. I hope that this is a piece of information that | 
 | 210 |   might be useful to the Laptop Mode patch or it's users." | 
 | 211 |  | 
 | 212 | * In syslog.conf, you can prefix entries with a dash ``-'' to omit syncing the | 
 | 213 |   file after every logging. When you're using laptop-mode and your disk doesn't | 
 | 214 |   spin down, this is a likely culprit. | 
 | 215 |  | 
 | 216 | * Richard Atterer observed that laptop mode does not work well with noflushd | 
 | 217 |   (http://noflushd.sourceforge.net/), it seems that noflushd prevents laptop-mode | 
 | 218 |   from doing its thing. | 
 | 219 |  | 
 | 220 | * If you're worried about your data, you might want to consider using a USB | 
 | 221 |   memory stick or something like that as a "working area". (Be aware though | 
 | 222 |   that flash memory can only handle a limited number of writes, and overuse | 
 | 223 |   may wear out your memory stick pretty quickly. Do _not_ use journalling | 
 | 224 |   filesystems on flash memory sticks.) | 
 | 225 |  | 
 | 226 |  | 
 | 227 | Configuration file for control and ACPI battery scripts | 
 | 228 | ------------------------------------------------------- | 
 | 229 |  | 
 | 230 | This allows the tunables to be changed for the scripts via an external | 
 | 231 | configuration file | 
 | 232 |  | 
 | 233 | It should be installed as /etc/default/laptop-mode on Debian, and as | 
 | 234 | /etc/sysconfig/laptop-mode on Red Hat, SUSE, Mandrake, and other work-alikes. | 
 | 235 |  | 
 | 236 | --------------------CONFIG FILE BEGIN------------------------------------------- | 
 | 237 | # Maximum time, in seconds, of hard drive spindown time that you are | 
| Matt LaPlante | 5d3f083 | 2006-11-30 05:21:10 +0100 | [diff] [blame] | 238 | # comfortable with. Worst case, it's possible that you could lose this | 
| Linus Torvalds | 1da177e | 2005-04-16 15:20:36 -0700 | [diff] [blame] | 239 | # amount of work if your battery fails you while in laptop mode. | 
 | 240 | #MAX_AGE=600 | 
 | 241 |  | 
 | 242 | # Automatically disable laptop mode when the number of minutes of battery | 
 | 243 | # that you have left goes below this threshold. | 
 | 244 | MINIMUM_BATTERY_MINUTES=10 | 
 | 245 |  | 
 | 246 | # Read-ahead, in 512-byte sectors. You can spin down the disk while playing MP3/OGG | 
 | 247 | # by setting the disk readahead to 8MB (READAHEAD=16384). Effectively, the disk | 
 | 248 | # will read a complete MP3 at once, and will then spin down while the MP3/OGG is | 
 | 249 | # playing. | 
 | 250 | #READAHEAD=4096 | 
 | 251 |  | 
 | 252 | # Shall we remount journaled fs. with appropriate commit interval? (1=yes) | 
 | 253 | #DO_REMOUNTS=1 | 
 | 254 |  | 
 | 255 | # And shall we add the "noatime" option to that as well? (1=yes) | 
 | 256 | #DO_REMOUNT_NOATIME=1 | 
 | 257 |  | 
 | 258 | # Dirty synchronous ratio.  At this percentage of dirty pages the process | 
 | 259 | # which | 
 | 260 | # calls write() does its own writeback | 
 | 261 | #DIRTY_RATIO=40 | 
 | 262 |  | 
 | 263 | # | 
 | 264 | # Allowed dirty background ratio, in percent.  Once DIRTY_RATIO has been | 
 | 265 | # exceeded, the kernel will wake pdflush which will then reduce the amount | 
 | 266 | # of dirty memory to dirty_background_ratio.  Set this nice and low, so once | 
 | 267 | # some writeout has commenced, we do a lot of it. | 
 | 268 | # | 
 | 269 | #DIRTY_BACKGROUND_RATIO=5 | 
 | 270 |  | 
 | 271 | # kernel default dirty buffer age | 
 | 272 | #DEF_AGE=30 | 
 | 273 | #DEF_UPDATE=5 | 
 | 274 | #DEF_DIRTY_BACKGROUND_RATIO=10 | 
 | 275 | #DEF_DIRTY_RATIO=40 | 
 | 276 | #DEF_XFS_AGE_BUFFER=15 | 
 | 277 | #DEF_XFS_SYNC_INTERVAL=30 | 
 | 278 | #DEF_XFS_BUFD_INTERVAL=1 | 
 | 279 |  | 
 | 280 | # This must be adjusted manually to the value of HZ in the running kernel | 
 | 281 | # on 2.4, until the XFS people change their 2.4 external interfaces to work in | 
 | 282 | # centisecs. This can be automated, but it's a work in progress that still | 
 | 283 | # needs# some fixes. On 2.6 kernels, XFS uses USER_HZ instead of HZ for | 
 | 284 | # external interfaces, and that is currently always set to 100. So you don't | 
 | 285 | # need to change this on 2.6. | 
 | 286 | #XFS_HZ=100 | 
 | 287 |  | 
 | 288 | # Should the maximum CPU frequency be adjusted down while on battery? | 
 | 289 | # Requires CPUFreq to be setup. | 
 | 290 | # See Documentation/cpu-freq/user-guide.txt for more info | 
 | 291 | #DO_CPU=0 | 
 | 292 |  | 
 | 293 | # When on battery what is the maximum CPU speed that the system should | 
 | 294 | # use? Legal values are "slowest" for the slowest speed that your | 
 | 295 | # CPU is able to operate at, or a value listed in: | 
 | 296 | # /sys/devices/system/cpu/cpu0/cpufreq/scaling_available_frequencies | 
 | 297 | # Only applicable if DO_CPU=1. | 
 | 298 | #CPU_MAXFREQ=slowest | 
 | 299 |  | 
 | 300 | # Idle timeout for your hard drive (man hdparm for valid values, -S option) | 
 | 301 | # Default is 2 hours on AC (AC_HD=244) and 20 seconds for battery (BATT_HD=4). | 
 | 302 | #AC_HD=244 | 
 | 303 | #BATT_HD=4 | 
 | 304 |  | 
 | 305 | # The drives for which to adjust the idle timeout. Separate them by a space, | 
 | 306 | # e.g. HD="/dev/hda /dev/hdb". | 
 | 307 | #HD="/dev/hda" | 
 | 308 |  | 
 | 309 | # Set the spindown timeout on a hard drive? | 
 | 310 | #DO_HD=1 | 
 | 311 |  | 
 | 312 | --------------------CONFIG FILE END--------------------------------------------- | 
 | 313 |  | 
 | 314 |  | 
 | 315 | Control script | 
 | 316 | -------------- | 
 | 317 |  | 
 | 318 | Please note that this control script works for the Linux 2.4 and 2.6 series (thanks | 
 | 319 | to Kiko Piris). | 
 | 320 |  | 
 | 321 | --------------------CONTROL SCRIPT BEGIN---------------------------------------- | 
 | 322 | #!/bin/bash | 
 | 323 |  | 
 | 324 | # start or stop laptop_mode, best run by a power management daemon when | 
 | 325 | # ac gets connected/disconnected from a laptop | 
 | 326 | # | 
 | 327 | # install as /sbin/laptop_mode | 
 | 328 | # | 
 | 329 | # Contributors to this script:   Kiko Piris | 
 | 330 | #				 Bart Samwel | 
 | 331 | #				 Micha Feigin | 
 | 332 | #				 Andrew Morton | 
 | 333 | #				 Herve Eychenne | 
 | 334 | #				 Dax Kelson | 
 | 335 | # | 
 | 336 | # Original Linux 2.4 version by: Jens Axboe | 
 | 337 |  | 
 | 338 | ############################################################################# | 
 | 339 |  | 
 | 340 | # Source config | 
 | 341 | if [ -f /etc/default/laptop-mode ] ; then | 
 | 342 | 	# Debian | 
 | 343 | 	. /etc/default/laptop-mode | 
 | 344 | elif [ -f /etc/sysconfig/laptop-mode ] ; then | 
 | 345 | 	# Others | 
 | 346 |         . /etc/sysconfig/laptop-mode | 
 | 347 | fi | 
 | 348 |  | 
 | 349 | # Don't raise an error if the config file is incomplete | 
 | 350 | # set defaults instead: | 
 | 351 |  | 
 | 352 | # Maximum time, in seconds, of hard drive spindown time that you are | 
| Matt LaPlante | 5d3f083 | 2006-11-30 05:21:10 +0100 | [diff] [blame] | 353 | # comfortable with. Worst case, it's possible that you could lose this | 
| Linus Torvalds | 1da177e | 2005-04-16 15:20:36 -0700 | [diff] [blame] | 354 | # amount of work if your battery fails you while in laptop mode. | 
 | 355 | MAX_AGE=${MAX_AGE:-'600'} | 
 | 356 |  | 
 | 357 | # Read-ahead, in kilobytes | 
 | 358 | READAHEAD=${READAHEAD:-'4096'} | 
 | 359 |  | 
| Adrian Bunk | 575c968 | 2006-01-15 02:00:17 +0100 | [diff] [blame] | 360 | # Shall we remount journaled fs. with appropriate commit interval? (1=yes) | 
| Linus Torvalds | 1da177e | 2005-04-16 15:20:36 -0700 | [diff] [blame] | 361 | DO_REMOUNTS=${DO_REMOUNTS:-'1'} | 
 | 362 |  | 
 | 363 | # And shall we add the "noatime" option to that as well? (1=yes) | 
 | 364 | DO_REMOUNT_NOATIME=${DO_REMOUNT_NOATIME:-'1'} | 
 | 365 |  | 
 | 366 | # Shall we adjust the idle timeout on a hard drive? | 
 | 367 | DO_HD=${DO_HD:-'1'} | 
 | 368 |  | 
 | 369 | # Adjust idle timeout on which hard drive? | 
 | 370 | HD="${HD:-'/dev/hda'}" | 
 | 371 |  | 
 | 372 | # spindown time for HD (hdparm -S values) | 
 | 373 | AC_HD=${AC_HD:-'244'} | 
 | 374 | BATT_HD=${BATT_HD:-'4'} | 
 | 375 |  | 
 | 376 | # Dirty synchronous ratio.  At this percentage of dirty pages the process which | 
 | 377 | # calls write() does its own writeback | 
 | 378 | DIRTY_RATIO=${DIRTY_RATIO:-'40'} | 
 | 379 |  | 
 | 380 | # cpu frequency scaling | 
 | 381 | # See Documentation/cpu-freq/user-guide.txt for more info | 
 | 382 | DO_CPU=${CPU_MANAGE:-'0'} | 
 | 383 | CPU_MAXFREQ=${CPU_MAXFREQ:-'slowest'} | 
 | 384 |  | 
 | 385 | # | 
 | 386 | # Allowed dirty background ratio, in percent.  Once DIRTY_RATIO has been | 
 | 387 | # exceeded, the kernel will wake pdflush which will then reduce the amount | 
 | 388 | # of dirty memory to dirty_background_ratio.  Set this nice and low, so once | 
 | 389 | # some writeout has commenced, we do a lot of it. | 
 | 390 | # | 
 | 391 | DIRTY_BACKGROUND_RATIO=${DIRTY_BACKGROUND_RATIO:-'5'} | 
 | 392 |  | 
 | 393 | # kernel default dirty buffer age | 
 | 394 | DEF_AGE=${DEF_AGE:-'30'} | 
 | 395 | DEF_UPDATE=${DEF_UPDATE:-'5'} | 
 | 396 | DEF_DIRTY_BACKGROUND_RATIO=${DEF_DIRTY_BACKGROUND_RATIO:-'10'} | 
 | 397 | DEF_DIRTY_RATIO=${DEF_DIRTY_RATIO:-'40'} | 
 | 398 | DEF_XFS_AGE_BUFFER=${DEF_XFS_AGE_BUFFER:-'15'} | 
 | 399 | DEF_XFS_SYNC_INTERVAL=${DEF_XFS_SYNC_INTERVAL:-'30'} | 
 | 400 | DEF_XFS_BUFD_INTERVAL=${DEF_XFS_BUFD_INTERVAL:-'1'} | 
 | 401 |  | 
 | 402 | # This must be adjusted manually to the value of HZ in the running kernel | 
 | 403 | # on 2.4, until the XFS people change their 2.4 external interfaces to work in | 
 | 404 | # centisecs. This can be automated, but it's a work in progress that still needs | 
 | 405 | # some fixes. On 2.6 kernels, XFS uses USER_HZ instead of HZ for external | 
 | 406 | # interfaces, and that is currently always set to 100. So you don't need to | 
 | 407 | # change this on 2.6. | 
 | 408 | XFS_HZ=${XFS_HZ:-'100'} | 
 | 409 |  | 
 | 410 | ############################################################################# | 
 | 411 |  | 
 | 412 | KLEVEL="$(uname -r | | 
 | 413 |              { | 
 | 414 | 	       IFS='.' read a b c | 
 | 415 | 	       echo $a.$b | 
 | 416 | 	     } | 
 | 417 | )" | 
 | 418 | case "$KLEVEL" in | 
 | 419 | 	"2.4"|"2.6") | 
 | 420 | 		;; | 
 | 421 | 	*) | 
 | 422 | 		echo "Unhandled kernel version: $KLEVEL ('uname -r' = '$(uname -r)')" >&2 | 
 | 423 | 		exit 1 | 
 | 424 | 		;; | 
 | 425 | esac | 
 | 426 |  | 
 | 427 | if [ ! -e /proc/sys/vm/laptop_mode ] ; then | 
 | 428 | 	echo "Kernel is not patched with laptop_mode patch." >&2 | 
 | 429 | 	exit 1 | 
 | 430 | fi | 
 | 431 |  | 
 | 432 | if [ ! -w /proc/sys/vm/laptop_mode ] ; then | 
 | 433 | 	echo "You do not have enough privileges to enable laptop_mode." >&2 | 
 | 434 | 	exit 1 | 
 | 435 | fi | 
 | 436 |  | 
 | 437 | # Remove an option (the first parameter) of the form option=<number> from | 
 | 438 | # a mount options string (the rest of the parameters). | 
 | 439 | parse_mount_opts () { | 
 | 440 | 	OPT="$1" | 
 | 441 | 	shift | 
 | 442 | 	echo ",$*," | sed		\ | 
 | 443 | 	 -e 's/,'"$OPT"'=[0-9]*,/,/g'	\ | 
 | 444 | 	 -e 's/,,*/,/g'			\ | 
 | 445 | 	 -e 's/^,//'			\ | 
 | 446 | 	 -e 's/,$//' | 
 | 447 | } | 
 | 448 |  | 
 | 449 | # Remove an option (the first parameter) without any arguments from | 
 | 450 | # a mount option string (the rest of the parameters). | 
 | 451 | parse_nonumber_mount_opts () { | 
 | 452 | 	OPT="$1" | 
 | 453 | 	shift | 
 | 454 | 	echo ",$*," | sed		\ | 
 | 455 | 	 -e 's/,'"$OPT"',/,/g'		\ | 
 | 456 | 	 -e 's/,,*/,/g'			\ | 
 | 457 | 	 -e 's/^,//'			\ | 
 | 458 | 	 -e 's/,$//' | 
 | 459 | } | 
 | 460 |  | 
 | 461 | # Find out the state of a yes/no option (e.g. "atime"/"noatime") in | 
 | 462 | # fstab for a given filesystem, and use this state to replace the | 
 | 463 | # value of the option in another mount options string. The device | 
 | 464 | # is the first argument, the option name the second, and the default | 
 | 465 | # value the third. The remainder is the mount options string. | 
 | 466 | # | 
 | 467 | # Example: | 
 | 468 | # parse_yesno_opts_wfstab /dev/hda1 atime atime defaults,noatime | 
 | 469 | # | 
 | 470 | # If fstab contains, say, "rw" for this filesystem, then the result | 
 | 471 | # will be "defaults,atime". | 
 | 472 | parse_yesno_opts_wfstab () { | 
 | 473 | 	L_DEV="$1" | 
 | 474 | 	OPT="$2" | 
 | 475 | 	DEF_OPT="$3" | 
 | 476 | 	shift 3 | 
 | 477 | 	L_OPTS="$*" | 
 | 478 | 	PARSEDOPTS1="$(parse_nonumber_mount_opts $OPT $L_OPTS)" | 
 | 479 | 	PARSEDOPTS1="$(parse_nonumber_mount_opts no$OPT $PARSEDOPTS1)" | 
 | 480 | 	# Watch for a default atime in fstab | 
 | 481 | 	FSTAB_OPTS="$(awk '$1 == "'$L_DEV'" { print $4 }' /etc/fstab)" | 
 | 482 | 	if echo "$FSTAB_OPTS" | grep "$OPT" > /dev/null ; then | 
 | 483 | 		# option specified in fstab: extract the value and use it | 
 | 484 | 		if echo "$FSTAB_OPTS" | grep "no$OPT" > /dev/null ; then | 
 | 485 | 			echo "$PARSEDOPTS1,no$OPT" | 
 | 486 | 		else | 
 | 487 | 			# no$OPT not found -- so we must have $OPT. | 
 | 488 | 			echo "$PARSEDOPTS1,$OPT" | 
 | 489 | 		fi | 
 | 490 | 	else | 
 | 491 | 		# option not specified in fstab -- choose the default. | 
 | 492 | 		echo "$PARSEDOPTS1,$DEF_OPT" | 
 | 493 | 	fi | 
 | 494 | } | 
 | 495 |  | 
 | 496 | # Find out the state of a numbered option (e.g. "commit=NNN") in | 
 | 497 | # fstab for a given filesystem, and use this state to replace the | 
 | 498 | # value of the option in another mount options string. The device | 
 | 499 | # is the first argument, and the option name the second. The | 
 | 500 | # remainder is the mount options string in which the replacement | 
 | 501 | # must be done. | 
 | 502 | # | 
 | 503 | # Example: | 
 | 504 | # parse_mount_opts_wfstab /dev/hda1 commit defaults,commit=7 | 
 | 505 | # | 
 | 506 | # If fstab contains, say, "commit=3,rw" for this filesystem, then the | 
 | 507 | # result will be "rw,commit=3". | 
 | 508 | parse_mount_opts_wfstab () { | 
 | 509 | 	L_DEV="$1" | 
 | 510 | 	OPT="$2" | 
 | 511 | 	shift 2 | 
 | 512 | 	L_OPTS="$*" | 
 | 513 | 	PARSEDOPTS1="$(parse_mount_opts $OPT $L_OPTS)" | 
 | 514 | 	# Watch for a default commit in fstab | 
 | 515 | 	FSTAB_OPTS="$(awk '$1 == "'$L_DEV'" { print $4 }' /etc/fstab)" | 
 | 516 | 	if echo "$FSTAB_OPTS" | grep "$OPT=" > /dev/null ; then | 
 | 517 | 		# option specified in fstab: extract the value, and use it | 
 | 518 | 		echo -n "$PARSEDOPTS1,$OPT=" | 
 | 519 | 		echo ",$FSTAB_OPTS," | sed \ | 
 | 520 | 		 -e 's/.*,'"$OPT"'=//'	\ | 
 | 521 | 		 -e 's/,.*//' | 
 | 522 | 	else | 
 | 523 | 		# option not specified in fstab: set it to 0 | 
 | 524 | 		echo "$PARSEDOPTS1,$OPT=0" | 
 | 525 | 	fi | 
 | 526 | } | 
 | 527 |  | 
 | 528 | deduce_fstype () { | 
 | 529 | 	MP="$1" | 
 | 530 | 	# My root filesystem unfortunately has | 
 | 531 | 	# type "unknown" in /etc/mtab. If we encounter | 
 | 532 | 	# "unknown", we try to get the type from fstab. | 
 | 533 | 	cat /etc/fstab | | 
 | 534 | 	grep -v '^#' | | 
 | 535 | 	while read FSTAB_DEV FSTAB_MP FSTAB_FST FSTAB_OPTS FSTAB_DUMP FSTAB_DUMP ; do | 
 | 536 | 		if [ "$FSTAB_MP" = "$MP" ]; then | 
 | 537 | 			echo $FSTAB_FST | 
 | 538 | 			exit 0 | 
 | 539 | 		fi | 
 | 540 | 	done | 
 | 541 | } | 
 | 542 |  | 
 | 543 | if [ $DO_REMOUNT_NOATIME -eq 1 ] ; then | 
 | 544 | 	NOATIME_OPT=",noatime" | 
 | 545 | fi | 
 | 546 |  | 
 | 547 | case "$1" in | 
 | 548 | 	start) | 
 | 549 | 		AGE=$((100*$MAX_AGE)) | 
 | 550 | 		XFS_AGE=$(($XFS_HZ*$MAX_AGE)) | 
 | 551 | 		echo -n "Starting laptop_mode" | 
 | 552 |  | 
 | 553 | 		if [ -d /proc/sys/vm/pagebuf ] ; then | 
 | 554 | 			# (For 2.4 and early 2.6.) | 
 | 555 | 			# This only needs to be set, not reset -- it is only used when | 
 | 556 | 			# laptop mode is enabled. | 
 | 557 | 			echo $XFS_AGE > /proc/sys/vm/pagebuf/lm_flush_age | 
 | 558 | 			echo $XFS_AGE > /proc/sys/fs/xfs/lm_sync_interval | 
 | 559 | 		elif [ -f /proc/sys/fs/xfs/lm_age_buffer ] ; then | 
 | 560 | 			# (A couple of early 2.6 laptop mode patches had these.) | 
 | 561 | 			# The same goes for these. | 
 | 562 | 			echo $XFS_AGE > /proc/sys/fs/xfs/lm_age_buffer | 
 | 563 | 			echo $XFS_AGE > /proc/sys/fs/xfs/lm_sync_interval | 
 | 564 | 		elif [ -f /proc/sys/fs/xfs/age_buffer ] ; then | 
 | 565 | 			# (2.6.6) | 
 | 566 | 			# But not for these -- they are also used in normal | 
 | 567 | 			# operation. | 
 | 568 | 			echo $XFS_AGE > /proc/sys/fs/xfs/age_buffer | 
 | 569 | 			echo $XFS_AGE > /proc/sys/fs/xfs/sync_interval | 
 | 570 | 		elif [ -f /proc/sys/fs/xfs/age_buffer_centisecs ] ; then | 
 | 571 | 			# (2.6.7 upwards) | 
 | 572 | 			# And not for these either. These are in centisecs, | 
 | 573 | 			# not USER_HZ, so we have to use $AGE, not $XFS_AGE. | 
 | 574 | 			echo $AGE > /proc/sys/fs/xfs/age_buffer_centisecs | 
 | 575 | 			echo $AGE > /proc/sys/fs/xfs/xfssyncd_centisecs | 
 | 576 | 			echo 3000 > /proc/sys/fs/xfs/xfsbufd_centisecs | 
 | 577 | 		fi | 
 | 578 |  | 
 | 579 | 		case "$KLEVEL" in | 
 | 580 | 			"2.4") | 
 | 581 | 				echo 1					> /proc/sys/vm/laptop_mode | 
 | 582 | 				echo "30 500 0 0 $AGE $AGE 60 20 0"	> /proc/sys/vm/bdflush | 
 | 583 | 				;; | 
 | 584 | 			"2.6") | 
 | 585 | 				echo 5					> /proc/sys/vm/laptop_mode | 
 | 586 | 				echo "$AGE"				> /proc/sys/vm/dirty_writeback_centisecs | 
 | 587 | 				echo "$AGE"				> /proc/sys/vm/dirty_expire_centisecs | 
 | 588 | 				echo "$DIRTY_RATIO"			> /proc/sys/vm/dirty_ratio | 
 | 589 | 				echo "$DIRTY_BACKGROUND_RATIO"		> /proc/sys/vm/dirty_background_ratio | 
 | 590 | 				;; | 
 | 591 | 		esac | 
 | 592 | 		if [ $DO_REMOUNTS -eq 1 ]; then | 
 | 593 | 			cat /etc/mtab | while read DEV MP FST OPTS DUMP PASS ; do | 
 | 594 | 				PARSEDOPTS="$(parse_mount_opts "$OPTS")" | 
 | 595 | 				if [ "$FST" = 'unknown' ]; then | 
 | 596 | 					FST=$(deduce_fstype $MP) | 
 | 597 | 				fi | 
 | 598 | 				case "$FST" in | 
 | 599 | 					"ext3"|"reiserfs") | 
 | 600 | 						PARSEDOPTS="$(parse_mount_opts commit "$OPTS")" | 
 | 601 | 						mount $DEV -t $FST $MP -o remount,$PARSEDOPTS,commit=$MAX_AGE$NOATIME_OPT | 
 | 602 | 						;; | 
 | 603 | 					"xfs") | 
 | 604 | 						mount $DEV -t $FST $MP -o remount,$OPTS$NOATIME_OPT | 
 | 605 | 						;; | 
 | 606 | 				esac | 
 | 607 | 				if [ -b $DEV ] ; then | 
 | 608 | 					blockdev --setra $(($READAHEAD * 2)) $DEV | 
 | 609 | 				fi | 
 | 610 | 			done | 
 | 611 | 		fi | 
 | 612 | 		if [ $DO_HD -eq 1 ] ; then | 
 | 613 | 			for THISHD in $HD ; do | 
 | 614 | 				/sbin/hdparm -S $BATT_HD $THISHD > /dev/null 2>&1 | 
 | 615 | 				/sbin/hdparm -B 1 $THISHD > /dev/null 2>&1 | 
 | 616 | 			done | 
 | 617 | 		fi | 
 | 618 | 		if [ $DO_CPU -eq 1 -a -e /sys/devices/system/cpu/cpu0/cpufreq/cpuinfo_min_freq ]; then | 
 | 619 | 			if [ $CPU_MAXFREQ = 'slowest' ]; then | 
 | 620 | 				CPU_MAXFREQ=`cat /sys/devices/system/cpu/cpu0/cpufreq/cpuinfo_min_freq` | 
 | 621 | 			fi | 
 | 622 | 			echo $CPU_MAXFREQ > /sys/devices/system/cpu/cpu0/cpufreq/scaling_max_freq | 
 | 623 | 		fi | 
 | 624 | 		echo "." | 
 | 625 | 		;; | 
 | 626 | 	stop) | 
 | 627 | 		U_AGE=$((100*$DEF_UPDATE)) | 
 | 628 | 		B_AGE=$((100*$DEF_AGE)) | 
 | 629 | 		echo -n "Stopping laptop_mode" | 
 | 630 | 		echo 0 > /proc/sys/vm/laptop_mode | 
 | 631 | 		if [ -f /proc/sys/fs/xfs/age_buffer -a ! -f /proc/sys/fs/xfs/lm_age_buffer ] ; then | 
 | 632 | 			# These need to be restored, if there are no lm_*. | 
 | 633 | 			echo $(($XFS_HZ*$DEF_XFS_AGE_BUFFER))	 	> /proc/sys/fs/xfs/age_buffer | 
 | 634 | 			echo $(($XFS_HZ*$DEF_XFS_SYNC_INTERVAL)) 	> /proc/sys/fs/xfs/sync_interval | 
 | 635 | 		elif [ -f /proc/sys/fs/xfs/age_buffer_centisecs ] ; then | 
 | 636 | 			# These need to be restored as well. | 
 | 637 | 			echo $((100*$DEF_XFS_AGE_BUFFER))	> /proc/sys/fs/xfs/age_buffer_centisecs | 
 | 638 | 			echo $((100*$DEF_XFS_SYNC_INTERVAL))	> /proc/sys/fs/xfs/xfssyncd_centisecs | 
 | 639 | 			echo $((100*$DEF_XFS_BUFD_INTERVAL))	> /proc/sys/fs/xfs/xfsbufd_centisecs | 
 | 640 | 		fi | 
 | 641 | 		case "$KLEVEL" in | 
 | 642 | 			"2.4") | 
 | 643 | 				echo "30 500 0 0 $U_AGE $B_AGE 60 20 0"	> /proc/sys/vm/bdflush | 
 | 644 | 				;; | 
 | 645 | 			"2.6") | 
 | 646 | 				echo "$U_AGE"				> /proc/sys/vm/dirty_writeback_centisecs | 
 | 647 | 				echo "$B_AGE"				> /proc/sys/vm/dirty_expire_centisecs | 
 | 648 | 				echo "$DEF_DIRTY_RATIO"			> /proc/sys/vm/dirty_ratio | 
 | 649 | 				echo "$DEF_DIRTY_BACKGROUND_RATIO"	> /proc/sys/vm/dirty_background_ratio | 
 | 650 | 				;; | 
 | 651 | 		esac | 
 | 652 | 		if [ $DO_REMOUNTS -eq 1 ] ; then | 
 | 653 | 			cat /etc/mtab | while read DEV MP FST OPTS DUMP PASS ; do | 
 | 654 | 				# Reset commit and atime options to defaults. | 
 | 655 | 				if [ "$FST" = 'unknown' ]; then | 
 | 656 | 					FST=$(deduce_fstype $MP) | 
 | 657 | 				fi | 
 | 658 | 				case "$FST" in | 
 | 659 | 					"ext3"|"reiserfs") | 
 | 660 | 						PARSEDOPTS="$(parse_mount_opts_wfstab $DEV commit $OPTS)" | 
 | 661 | 						PARSEDOPTS="$(parse_yesno_opts_wfstab $DEV atime atime $PARSEDOPTS)" | 
 | 662 | 						mount $DEV -t $FST $MP -o remount,$PARSEDOPTS | 
 | 663 | 						;; | 
 | 664 | 					"xfs") | 
 | 665 | 						PARSEDOPTS="$(parse_yesno_opts_wfstab $DEV atime atime $OPTS)" | 
 | 666 | 						mount $DEV -t $FST $MP -o remount,$PARSEDOPTS | 
 | 667 | 						;; | 
 | 668 | 				esac | 
 | 669 | 				if [ -b $DEV ] ; then | 
 | 670 | 					blockdev --setra 256 $DEV | 
 | 671 | 				fi | 
 | 672 | 			done | 
 | 673 | 		fi | 
 | 674 | 		if [ $DO_HD -eq 1 ] ; then | 
 | 675 | 			for THISHD in $HD ; do | 
 | 676 | 				/sbin/hdparm -S $AC_HD $THISHD > /dev/null 2>&1 | 
 | 677 | 				/sbin/hdparm -B 255 $THISHD > /dev/null 2>&1 | 
 | 678 | 			done | 
 | 679 | 		fi | 
 | 680 | 		if [ $DO_CPU -eq 1 -a -e /sys/devices/system/cpu/cpu0/cpufreq/cpuinfo_min_freq ]; then | 
 | 681 | 			echo `cat /sys/devices/system/cpu/cpu0/cpufreq/cpuinfo_max_freq` > /sys/devices/system/cpu/cpu0/cpufreq/scaling_max_freq | 
 | 682 | 		fi | 
 | 683 | 		echo "." | 
 | 684 | 		;; | 
 | 685 | 	*) | 
 | 686 | 		echo "Usage: $0 {start|stop}" 2>&1 | 
 | 687 | 		exit 1 | 
 | 688 | 		;; | 
 | 689 |  | 
 | 690 | esac | 
 | 691 |  | 
 | 692 | exit 0 | 
 | 693 | --------------------CONTROL SCRIPT END------------------------------------------ | 
 | 694 |  | 
 | 695 |  | 
 | 696 | ACPI integration | 
 | 697 | ---------------- | 
 | 698 |  | 
 | 699 | Dax Kelson submitted this so that the ACPI acpid daemon will | 
 | 700 | kick off the laptop_mode script and run hdparm. The part that | 
 | 701 | automatically disables laptop mode when the battery is low was | 
| Matt LaPlante | 4ae0edc | 2006-11-30 04:58:40 +0100 | [diff] [blame] | 702 | written by Jan Topinski. | 
| Linus Torvalds | 1da177e | 2005-04-16 15:20:36 -0700 | [diff] [blame] | 703 |  | 
 | 704 | -----------------/etc/acpi/events/ac_adapter BEGIN------------------------------ | 
 | 705 | event=ac_adapter | 
 | 706 | action=/etc/acpi/actions/ac.sh %e | 
 | 707 | ----------------/etc/acpi/events/ac_adapter END--------------------------------- | 
 | 708 |  | 
 | 709 |  | 
 | 710 | -----------------/etc/acpi/events/battery BEGIN--------------------------------- | 
 | 711 | event=battery.* | 
 | 712 | action=/etc/acpi/actions/battery.sh %e | 
 | 713 | ----------------/etc/acpi/events/battery END------------------------------------ | 
 | 714 |  | 
 | 715 |  | 
 | 716 | ----------------/etc/acpi/actions/ac.sh BEGIN----------------------------------- | 
 | 717 | #!/bin/bash | 
 | 718 |  | 
 | 719 | # ac on/offline event handler | 
 | 720 |  | 
 | 721 | status=`awk '/^state: / { print $2 }' /proc/acpi/ac_adapter/$2/state` | 
 | 722 |  | 
 | 723 | case $status in | 
 | 724 |         "on-line") | 
 | 725 |                 /sbin/laptop_mode stop | 
 | 726 |                 exit 0 | 
 | 727 |         ;; | 
 | 728 |         "off-line") | 
 | 729 |                 /sbin/laptop_mode start | 
 | 730 |                 exit 0 | 
 | 731 |         ;; | 
 | 732 | esac | 
 | 733 | ---------------------------/etc/acpi/actions/ac.sh END-------------------------- | 
 | 734 |  | 
 | 735 |  | 
 | 736 | ---------------------------/etc/acpi/actions/battery.sh BEGIN------------------- | 
 | 737 | #! /bin/bash | 
 | 738 |  | 
 | 739 | # Automatically disable laptop mode when the battery almost runs out. | 
 | 740 |  | 
 | 741 | BATT_INFO=/proc/acpi/battery/$2/state | 
 | 742 |  | 
 | 743 | if [[ -f /proc/sys/vm/laptop_mode ]] | 
 | 744 | then | 
 | 745 |    LM=`cat /proc/sys/vm/laptop_mode` | 
 | 746 |    if [[ $LM -gt 0 ]] | 
 | 747 |    then | 
 | 748 |      if [[ -f $BATT_INFO ]] | 
 | 749 |      then | 
 | 750 |         # Source the config file only now that we know we need | 
 | 751 |         if [ -f /etc/default/laptop-mode ] ; then | 
 | 752 |                 # Debian | 
 | 753 |                 . /etc/default/laptop-mode | 
 | 754 |         elif [ -f /etc/sysconfig/laptop-mode ] ; then | 
 | 755 |                 # Others | 
 | 756 |                 . /etc/sysconfig/laptop-mode | 
 | 757 |         fi | 
 | 758 |         MINIMUM_BATTERY_MINUTES=${MINIMUM_BATTERY_MINUTES:-'10'} | 
 | 759 |  | 
 | 760 |         ACTION="`cat $BATT_INFO | grep charging | cut -c 26-`" | 
 | 761 |         if [[ ACTION -eq "discharging" ]] | 
 | 762 |         then | 
 | 763 |            PRESENT_RATE=`cat $BATT_INFO | grep "present rate:" | sed  "s/.* \([0-9][0-9]* \).*/\1/" ` | 
 | 764 |            REMAINING=`cat $BATT_INFO | grep "remaining capacity:" | sed  "s/.* \([0-9][0-9]* \).*/\1/" ` | 
 | 765 |         fi | 
 | 766 |         if (($REMAINING * 60 / $PRESENT_RATE < $MINIMUM_BATTERY_MINUTES)) | 
 | 767 |         then | 
 | 768 |            /sbin/laptop_mode stop | 
 | 769 |         fi | 
 | 770 |      else | 
 | 771 |        logger -p daemon.warning "You are using laptop mode and your battery interface $BATT_INFO is missing. This may lead to loss of data when the battery runs out. Check kernel ACPI support and /proc/acpi/battery folder, and edit /etc/acpi/battery.sh to set BATT_INFO to the correct path." | 
 | 772 |      fi | 
 | 773 |    fi | 
 | 774 | fi | 
 | 775 | ---------------------------/etc/acpi/actions/battery.sh END-------------------- | 
 | 776 |  | 
 | 777 |  | 
 | 778 | Monitoring tool | 
 | 779 | --------------- | 
 | 780 |  | 
 | 781 | Bartek Kania submitted this, it can be used to measure how much time your disk | 
 | 782 | spends spun up/down. | 
 | 783 |  | 
 | 784 | ---------------------------dslm.c BEGIN----------------------------------------- | 
 | 785 | /* | 
 | 786 |  * Simple Disk Sleep Monitor | 
 | 787 |  *  by Bartek Kania | 
 | 788 |  * Licenced under the GPL | 
 | 789 |  */ | 
 | 790 | #include <unistd.h> | 
 | 791 | #include <stdlib.h> | 
 | 792 | #include <stdio.h> | 
 | 793 | #include <fcntl.h> | 
 | 794 | #include <errno.h> | 
 | 795 | #include <time.h> | 
 | 796 | #include <string.h> | 
 | 797 | #include <signal.h> | 
 | 798 | #include <sys/ioctl.h> | 
 | 799 | #include <linux/hdreg.h> | 
 | 800 |  | 
 | 801 | #ifdef DEBUG | 
 | 802 | #define D(x) x | 
 | 803 | #else | 
 | 804 | #define D(x) | 
 | 805 | #endif | 
 | 806 |  | 
 | 807 | int endit = 0; | 
 | 808 |  | 
 | 809 | /* Check if the disk is in powersave-mode | 
 | 810 |  * Most of the code is stolen from hdparm. | 
 | 811 |  * 1 = active, 0 = standby/sleep, -1 = unknown */ | 
 | 812 | int check_powermode(int fd) | 
 | 813 | { | 
 | 814 |     unsigned char args[4] = {WIN_CHECKPOWERMODE1,0,0,0}; | 
 | 815 |     int state; | 
 | 816 |  | 
 | 817 |     if (ioctl(fd, HDIO_DRIVE_CMD, &args) | 
 | 818 | 	&& (args[0] = WIN_CHECKPOWERMODE2) /* try again with 0x98 */ | 
 | 819 | 	&& ioctl(fd, HDIO_DRIVE_CMD, &args)) { | 
 | 820 | 	if (errno != EIO || args[0] != 0 || args[1] != 0) { | 
 | 821 | 	    state = -1; /* "unknown"; */ | 
 | 822 | 	} else | 
 | 823 | 	    state = 0; /* "sleeping"; */ | 
 | 824 |     } else { | 
 | 825 | 	state = (args[2] == 255) ? 1 : 0; | 
 | 826 |     } | 
 | 827 |     D(printf(" drive state is:  %d\n", state)); | 
 | 828 |  | 
 | 829 |     return state; | 
 | 830 | } | 
 | 831 |  | 
 | 832 | char *state_name(int i) | 
 | 833 | { | 
 | 834 |     if (i == -1) return "unknown"; | 
 | 835 |     if (i == 0) return "sleeping"; | 
 | 836 |     if (i == 1) return "active"; | 
 | 837 |  | 
 | 838 |     return "internal error"; | 
 | 839 | } | 
 | 840 |  | 
 | 841 | char *myctime(time_t time) | 
 | 842 | { | 
 | 843 |     char *ts = ctime(&time); | 
 | 844 |     ts[strlen(ts) - 1] = 0; | 
 | 845 |  | 
 | 846 |     return ts; | 
 | 847 | } | 
 | 848 |  | 
 | 849 | void measure(int fd) | 
 | 850 | { | 
 | 851 |     time_t start_time; | 
 | 852 |     int last_state; | 
 | 853 |     time_t last_time; | 
 | 854 |     int curr_state; | 
 | 855 |     time_t curr_time = 0; | 
 | 856 |     time_t time_diff; | 
 | 857 |     time_t active_time = 0; | 
 | 858 |     time_t sleep_time = 0; | 
 | 859 |     time_t unknown_time = 0; | 
 | 860 |     time_t total_time = 0; | 
 | 861 |     int changes = 0; | 
 | 862 |     float tmp; | 
 | 863 |  | 
 | 864 |     printf("Starting measurements\n"); | 
 | 865 |  | 
 | 866 |     last_state = check_powermode(fd); | 
 | 867 |     start_time = last_time = time(0); | 
 | 868 |     printf("  System is in state %s\n\n", state_name(last_state)); | 
 | 869 |  | 
 | 870 |     while(!endit) { | 
 | 871 | 	sleep(1); | 
 | 872 | 	curr_state = check_powermode(fd); | 
 | 873 |  | 
 | 874 | 	if (curr_state != last_state || endit) { | 
 | 875 | 	    changes++; | 
 | 876 | 	    curr_time = time(0); | 
 | 877 | 	    time_diff = curr_time - last_time; | 
 | 878 |  | 
 | 879 | 	    if (last_state == 1) active_time += time_diff; | 
 | 880 | 	    else if (last_state == 0) sleep_time += time_diff; | 
 | 881 | 	    else unknown_time += time_diff; | 
 | 882 |  | 
 | 883 | 	    last_state = curr_state; | 
 | 884 | 	    last_time = curr_time; | 
 | 885 |  | 
 | 886 | 	    printf("%s: State-change to %s\n", myctime(curr_time), | 
 | 887 | 		   state_name(curr_state)); | 
 | 888 | 	} | 
 | 889 |     } | 
 | 890 |     changes--; /* Compensate for SIGINT */ | 
 | 891 |  | 
 | 892 |     total_time = time(0) - start_time; | 
 | 893 |     printf("\nTotal running time:  %lus\n", curr_time - start_time); | 
 | 894 |     printf(" State changed %d times\n", changes); | 
 | 895 |  | 
 | 896 |     tmp = (float)sleep_time / (float)total_time * 100; | 
 | 897 |     printf(" Time in sleep state:   %lus (%.2f%%)\n", sleep_time, tmp); | 
 | 898 |     tmp = (float)active_time / (float)total_time * 100; | 
 | 899 |     printf(" Time in active state:  %lus (%.2f%%)\n", active_time, tmp); | 
 | 900 |     tmp = (float)unknown_time / (float)total_time * 100; | 
 | 901 |     printf(" Time in unknown state: %lus (%.2f%%)\n", unknown_time, tmp); | 
 | 902 | } | 
 | 903 |  | 
 | 904 | void ender(int s) | 
 | 905 | { | 
 | 906 |     endit = 1; | 
 | 907 | } | 
 | 908 |  | 
 | 909 | void usage() | 
 | 910 | { | 
 | 911 |     puts("usage: dslm [-w <time>] <disk>"); | 
 | 912 |     exit(0); | 
 | 913 | } | 
 | 914 |  | 
| Jesper Juhl | ffd59da | 2006-01-11 01:48:08 +0100 | [diff] [blame] | 915 | int main(int argc, char **argv) | 
| Linus Torvalds | 1da177e | 2005-04-16 15:20:36 -0700 | [diff] [blame] | 916 | { | 
 | 917 |     int fd; | 
 | 918 |     char *disk = 0; | 
 | 919 |     int settle_time = 60; | 
 | 920 |  | 
 | 921 |     /* Parse the simple command-line */ | 
| Randy Dunlap | 8c37bea | 2006-04-10 22:54:21 -0700 | [diff] [blame] | 922 |     if (argc == 2) | 
 | 923 | 	disk = argv[1]; | 
 | 924 |     else if (argc == 4) { | 
 | 925 | 	settle_time = atoi(argv[2]); | 
 | 926 | 	disk = argv[3]; | 
| Linus Torvalds | 1da177e | 2005-04-16 15:20:36 -0700 | [diff] [blame] | 927 |     } else | 
 | 928 | 	usage(); | 
 | 929 |  | 
 | 930 |     if (!(fd = open(disk, O_RDONLY|O_NONBLOCK))) { | 
 | 931 | 	printf("Can't open %s, because: %s\n", disk, strerror(errno)); | 
 | 932 | 	exit(-1); | 
 | 933 |     } | 
 | 934 |  | 
 | 935 |     if (settle_time) { | 
 | 936 | 	printf("Waiting %d seconds for the system to settle down to " | 
 | 937 | 	       "'normal'\n", settle_time); | 
 | 938 | 	sleep(settle_time); | 
 | 939 |     } else | 
 | 940 | 	puts("Not waiting for system to settle down"); | 
 | 941 |  | 
 | 942 |     signal(SIGINT, ender); | 
 | 943 |  | 
 | 944 |     measure(fd); | 
 | 945 |  | 
 | 946 |     close(fd); | 
 | 947 |  | 
 | 948 |     return 0; | 
 | 949 | } | 
 | 950 | ---------------------------dslm.c END------------------------------------------- |