Is this really made by Samsung? I was using conservative for a while thinking I couldn't possibly get better life than a governor called "conservative," but PegasusQ trumps it easily. Why would Samsung call it PegasusQ anyway?
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For battery life and good performance.
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I have 3 of them....deadline....cfq and noop what do they do and what are the differences? And which is best?
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They determine the importance of input and output processes. Google it and you should find more details or specifics about each. I lean on flash based IO's as that is the type of memory we have.
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blankit said:
I have 3 of them....deadline....cfq and noop what do they do and what are the differences? And which is best?
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Have a look at the thread below. It has all the info you'll need regarding schedulers, governors etc.
http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=1369817
I'm not even sure what kernel I am running but I want to get the most efficient and most battery conservative kernel available. I don't want to deal with any issues. Can anyone help? Thanks!
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Hey guys. I'm running air kernel on a Verizon galaxy nexus. As you know there are a TON of governers and a few schedulers...which do you guys recommend and what even is a scheduler?
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http://www.lmgtfy.com
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Governors are how your CPU scales through frequencies. You can Google what governors do what. And an I/O scheduler is how Input and Output data is taken in. How it schedules priority of data. And how efficiently it does it. I would say pegasusq is the best gov. And VR or Fiops is the best I/O at least in my expierence.
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Does Stweaks have a good way to stress test the CPU/GPU at each frequency? I plan to under-volt my CPU/GPU. If not, what would be a good way/app to stress test at each frequency?
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StabilityTest does the job.
I couldn't run the scaling test. It needed an ondemand or userspace governor.
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