Hello All,
Long time lurker and reader of this website, but I finally broke down and decided make an account. I'm really excited to be joining the XDA scene. I know that brash newbs probably make extremely over ambitious claims all of the time. However, I truly hope that one day I will be able to contribute something of value to this community.
At any rate, I have a few questions about the Asus Transformer Infinity tf700. I currently own one and have been thinking about installing [CROMi-Xenogenesis] on it, over the stock firmware.
link: http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=2223492
With that being said, there are a few things that I don't quite understand and am having an incredibly hard time finding answers for. I am currently trying to decide between sticking the stock kernel or flashing one of the modded ones by By_that. The modded kernel boasts the following features:
Row Scheduler, UV, ISO9660 and Fsync Control
With the exception of Fsync Control... I am completely in the dark as to what these things are. After doing a quick google search I returned this:http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ISO_9660. But, I still don't quite understand what it ISO9660 means or what exact use may come out of it. Nor UV? Please excuse my ignorance.
Would anyone be so kind as to explain these things to me, or point me in the right direction, so that I may learn more?
joshparrisjosh said:
I am currently trying to decide between sticking the stock kernel or flashing one of the modded ones by By_that.
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Click to collapse
It's safe to use the modded kernel, I am using it myself.
joshparrisjosh said:
Row Scheduler, UV, ISO9660 and Fsync Control
With the exception of Fsync Control... I am completely in the dark as to what these things are. After doing a quick google search I returned this:http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ISO_9660. But, I still don't quite understand what it ISO9660 means or what exact use may come out of it. Nor UV? Please excuse my ignorance.
Would anyone be so kind as to explain these things to me, or point me in the right direction, so that I may learn more?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
For slightly more information about the kernel's features, read the dev thread: http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=2230059
_that said:
It's safe to use the modded kernel, I am using it myself.
For slightly more information about the kernel's features, read the dev thread: http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=2230059
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Click to collapse
Wow. Never would I expect to get a reply from the dev himself. LoL. I sincerely thank you. Okay, so slowly but surely I've been scanning through the dev thread. And, I would post this reply there, however I seem to be unable...
I was able to resolve most of my questions. But, there is one which still remains. I still do not understand, what is: ISO 9660 + UDF support (CD/DVD filesystems). For the uninitiated, how might one benefit from this feature?
joshparrisjosh said:
I still do not understand, what is: ISO 9660 + UDF support (CD/DVD filesystems). For the uninitiated, how might one benefit from this feature?
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Click to collapse
It allows you to read optical discs or disc images - e.g. by attaching a DVD drive to the dock's USB port, or over the network. Someone requested this, and it was easy to enable in the kernel config.
Related
Since SetCPU was updated today to support the tegra II chip, I thought I would just give you all a heads up. Hope to see some kernels compiled with overclocking slots soon.
coolestmage said:
Since SetCPU was updated today to support the tegra II chip, I thought I would just give you all a heads up. Hope to see some kernels compiled with overclocking slots soon.
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Click to collapse
Cant you overclock by hand without that?
There are a few other apps and methods to overclock. The newest version of setcpu is able to see the slots in clemsyn's kernel, but they don't exceed 1ghz.
Sent from my Droid using XDA App
Looks like the xoom is already OCd to 1.5. Can't wait to see some kernels for us too
Wrong section.
At any rate, I'm sure once coolbho3000 puts his overclock code in github, the kernel devs around here may be able to get these puppies overclocked as well. The difference being that the Xoom as a .36 based kernel as where we are still running .32 based kernels, so there is just as much chance that it doesn't port.
When posting, think of the content and context. This thread is about an app. But this section is for Guides, Kernels, and ROMs to be released. I know this section is where most folks spend most or all of their timing reading/posting, but there are 4 sections for a reason, to keep content organized and relevant. Let's help the mods do that by posting in the appropriate section.
miphonematt said:
Wrong section.
At any rate, I'm sure once coolbho3000 puts his overclock code in github, the kernel devs around here may be able to get these puppies overclocked as well. The difference being that the Xoom as a .36 based kernel as where we are still running .32 based kernels, so there is just as much chance that it doesn't port.
When posting, think of the content and context. This thread is about an app. But this section is for Guides, Kernels, and ROMs to be released. I know this section is where most folks spend most or all of their timing reading/posting, but there are 4 sections for a reason, to keep content organized and relevant. Let's help the mods do that by posting in the appropriate section.
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Am I missing something? Isn't this in the general section?
Why do there seem to be so many self imposed forum police these days? Seems like half the posts I see are people *****ing at the op
There is a big difference between 36 and 32. Honestly, I only assume this from looking at the latest 38 rc commits and comparing the two. But it seems to be significant, even in its comments and verbosity. What's missing is cpu-tegra.c or the cpufreq driver for tegra written by Colin Cross (android dev) - instead we have NVIDIA's cryptic cpufreq.c .. I can barely understand what's going on with most code.. but it seems like our kernel version is from a time where NVIDIA's code was still being sorted thru by the aforementioned Google dev.
I have setcpu installed however I cant change the governor
collindv said:
Am I missing something? Isn't this in the general section?
Why do there seem to be so many self imposed forum police these days? Seems like half the posts I see are people *****ing at the op
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Click to collapse
Because we are supposed to self police ourselves otherwise the mods just close our forum.
grinch247 said:
I have setcpu installed however I cant change the governor
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Click to collapse
Because your kernel isnt set up to be changed
thebadfrog said:
Because your kernel isnt set up to be changed
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however I can alter the speed up or down...and check off set on boot..
grinch247 said:
however I can alter the speed up or down...and check off set on boot..
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Click to collapse
Yes and so can I. I can also set the governor with a script or manually. They kernel for the GTab has 2 settings....performance and powersave... and as far as I know setcpu doesnt support the .32 kernel that GTab has. It does support the .36 kernel that the xoom has.
collindv said:
Am I missing something? Isn't this in the general section?
Why do there seem to be so many self imposed forum police these days? Seems like half the posts I see are people *****ing at the op
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I (one of the two mods) moved this into the General section where it should be. It had been in the Development section which wasn't the right place.
And thebadfrog is correct - we (as a community) benefit when everyone helps everyone out - including making sure posts are created in the right spot, and aren't just another variation on a question that might have been asked 15,245,332 times before.
I apologise for posting in development. I wasn't even paying attention. Thank your for moving the thread for me.
Originally Posted by coolestmage
Since SetCPU was updated today to support the tegra II chip, I thought I would just give you all a heads up. Hope to see some kernels compiled with overclocking slots soon.
Cant you overclock by hand without that?
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You need a kernel that supports overclocking and the GTab doesnt have one yet
thebadfrog said:
Yes and so can I. I can also set the governor with a script or manually. They kernel for the GTab has 2 settings....performance and powersave... and as far as I know setcpu doesnt support the .32 kernel that GTab has. It does support the .36 kernel that the xoom has.
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wondering if the xoom setcpu profile would jive w/ our tablets?
The gtbalet's benchmark is around 2,500. The overclocked Xoom got 2850. Standard Xoom @ 1Ghz got 2,150.
Am I missing something???? If the gtablet could be OC'd that would be huge.
grinch247 said:
wondering if the xoom setcpu profile would jive w/ our tablets?
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Kayak83 said:
The gtbalet's benchmark is around 2,500. The overclocked Xoom got 2850. Standard Xoom @ 1Ghz got 2,150.
Am I missing something???? If the gtablet could be OC'd that would be huge.
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Click to collapse
The profiles won't until the AOSP frequency scaling is imported into the kernel sources - and that's not an easy process. Then the kernel will have to be compiled, etc.
Yes - it'd be nice to be OC'd - but battery life would be affected. It's a tradeoff in many ways....
jerdog said:
The profiles won't until the AOSP frequency scaling is imported into the kernel sources - and that's not an easy process. Then the kernel will have to be compiled, etc.
Yes - it'd be nice to be OC'd - but battery life would be affected. It's a tradeoff in many ways....
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On my OG Droid I like being able to drop the speed for battery savings when the screen is off if it's not in use. So there's more in it than just big numbers.
I'm struggling to recognize the benefit of a custom kernel on prime.
Also, Revolver has piqued my interest. I've seen other posts that are similar to this, but not quite as detailed as i'd like.
What does a custom kernel bring you? I have Prime 1.8.4 and haven't even really recognized the difference between in and the stock firmware.
Please be patient, i'm new to the Android OS.
So, to rehash, im looking for information on:
The benefits of Prime.
The benefits of a custom kernel + prime or revolver.
The benefits of Revolver.
Revolver + a custom kernel.
I'm appreciate the fact that you guys may not have time to indulge a noob like me. If anyone can help me find the resources i need, i'd greatly greatly greatly appreciate it!!!!
The guides & how-to's on this site are amazing, and i realize that most of this stuff is geared toward developers (i plan on developing, and have just begun my studies. I shall be as amazing as you all one day!!!) but i'm missing quite a bit of information. Few of the guides i've seen speak of what the software actually is/is intended to do/be, or how it's different.
P.S. If anyone has any idea if there is a ROM/ Android dev wiki, i'd appreciate the location of it.
If not, i think ill start one!
I saw a thread that kinda talked about what a kernel is, but I think, for me, I use Clemsyn kernel because it allows me to overclock (overclocking at 1400~1504 atm) up to 1600ghz. That lets your tablet run faster than the factory setting (which sets it lower for less chance of a burn out). Other than that, I don't really know either and I'd like to hear some replies too =D.
its basically similar to the benefits of a custom rom. it lets you...
1) overclock
2) adds support for kernel modules like ntfs, cifs, 3g.....
3) can allow for optimizations
clemsyn is always playing with bus speeds and memory timings to squeeze the most performance out of the tablet. he also adds modules and functionality like the poster above said.
I like custom roms because they do awesome things, like compile tun and cifs support into the kernel. now, i have been on prime for some time, but a lot of things seemed to be a little snappier over the stock rom.
i don't bother overclocking.
I've finally managed to get the 6210 kernel to compile AND work with the standalone kernel modules that samsung didn't bother to provide source for (ar6000 and j4fs.) It seems that the source on opensource.samsung.com uses different config flags than the source they used to compile for the shipping tablet.
The question is: Now that I can recompile it, what do I do with it? Well, I'll think about that and come up with some interesting answers. Probably a few efficiency tweaks, modifying the init.rc to allow for init.d parsing, and.. well, I don't know what else.
(I can find the source for the ar6000 adapter and j4fs, but I was extremely determined to get things working with the existing modules. I'm stubborn.)
Take care
Gary
Good luck gary!
Can you get overclocking enabled?
Sent from my GT-P6210 using xda premium
excellent job gary. bravo!
Excellent work. I might try my hand at this kernel development stuff. I did a lot of work with pascal a number of years back. Some c on the side. I might be able to add features that others have pioneered? We'll see... time is the enemy I believe. Sorry about the ramblings.
Sent from my GT-P6210 using xda premium
I've slimmed down the kernel a bit and also added support for init.d scripts (of course with no so-called ROM devs to take advantage of that, it's useless.)
I'm actually more interested in undervolting support than overclocking, but will add both around the same time. I should be able to post the kernel for the 6210 (only) sometime before the end of this year (local time.)
Take care
Gary
posted in the development section
garyd9 said:
I've slimmed down the kernel a bit and also added support for init.d scripts (of course with no so-called ROM devs to take advantage of that, it's useless.)
I'm actually more interested in undervolting support than overclocking, but will add both around the same time. I should be able to post the kernel for the 6210 (only) sometime before the end of this year (local time.)
Take care
Gary
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Hey, users can throw stuff in init.d themselves!
(although most are too lazy to do so...)
i would like my ext partition on my sdcard to mount itself if you can do that gary! thanks and good luck!
I tried the kernel on mine and I don't like it. It's kinda choppy now going from page to page. How can I revert back to the stock kernel?
deezomaxima said:
I tried the kernel on mine and I don't like it. It's kinda choppy now going from page to page. How can I revert back to the stock kernel?
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Please find the thread(s) in the dev subforum referring to ODIN and/or stock firmware.
Thanks Gary. Not sure if it's just my Tab but just being honest about what I was seeing.
deezomaxima said:
Thanks Gary. Not sure if it's just my Tab but just being honest about what I was seeing.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
No problem.
Could you add tun module to support OpenVPN? The default kernel doesn't have that module so that OpenVPN doesn't work. Thanks!
maxofmin said:
Could you add tun module to support OpenVPN? The default kernel doesn't have that module so that OpenVPN doesn't work. Thanks!
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Click to collapse
I'm not familiar with that, but I'd be happy to investigate it. I'll add it to my 'todo' (but no promises on a timeline.)
maxofmin said:
Could you add tun module to support OpenVPN? The default kernel doesn't have that module so that OpenVPN doesn't work. Thanks!
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Click to collapse
Actually... It appears that 'tun' is already compiled into the kernel (directly - not as a module.) You should be able to use it without loading "tun.ko".
Can you please check this out?
Gary
Gary,
Correction on my assessment of your kernel. It's fine.
I'm back to stock and it's still doing what it was doing at moments and I've come to 2 conclusions:
1. The email widget I'm using on one page with a few icons
2. The Facebook widget I'm using on another page.
Pages with just icons seem to run fine.
Now I saw in your first post that you said you weren't into benchmarking for speed but have you benchmarked for battery life over the stock settings?
deezomaxima said:
Now I saw in your first post that you said you weren't into benchmarking for speed but have you benchmarked for battery life over the stock settings?
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Only very non-scientific ones. (It's extremely difficult to ensure that exact same number of messages are pushed to my phone in a given period of time, that various forms of wifi interference are causing the same increases in power, etc.) That being said, I'm getting slightly better time on my battery with wifi set to "always on" compared to what I got on the stock kernel with wifi set to "never turn off when plugged in." (tablet was left in range of an AP in both cases.) I drop perhaps 5% in a 16 hour period with little to no screen time.
However, I'm also undervolting a bit with the custom kernel (values used are posted in another thread in this subforum), and have no active widgets beyond a single WX one that polls once/hr. I also changed the governor on my own to conservative at default settings (which saves a bit of battery as well.) Default for the kernel is ondemand which gives slightly better "snappiness."
Take care
Gary
Does it make a huge difference? Of course not. The undervolting is probably the only thing making much of a difference at all.
BTW, some of the tradeoffs between ondemand and conservative can be reduced by making some tweaks to the conservative governor:
https://github.com/Entropy512/linux_kernel_sgh-i777/commit/3b92eb76e72bbaa88aa8d87d306d1b61c9485912
Should be easy to port to .36
Main thing there if you don't want to change defaults is the stuff that reduces the minimum polling interval - the MIN_SAMPLING_RATE_RATIO lines - everything else is just tuning more aggressive (performance-tuned) defaults.
Thanks for the reply Gary.
So, I'm back on your kernel and installed SetCPU. I'm still messing with the settings to see what I get as far as battery life. I've had my Tab off charge since 7am this morning and it's now 1320 and Juice plotter is showing I have 67 hours of run time (95%) as opposed to seeing numbers in the 40s before hand. My device now wakes up out of sleep as it should instead of going into a non-responsive state sending me to reboot the whole device.
Everything is looking good now.
hi...I have bigxie apex ics rom on my nexus s and when i flash matr1x kernel 19.5cfs it starts to freeze. Works just fine with the stock kernel. Also when i was using the cm9 it worked fine with the stock but when i flashed matr1x kernel it started to freeze and reboot. Please help!
His kernel is undervolted by default. The phone might not be able to handle the voltages. I have no idea how to fix it though since you can't even get past the full boot. Better off going with something else.
had the same issue, just use another kernel or raise voltages. i've got no idea why everyone recommends matr1x, UV by default just doesn't make sense since every cpu behaves differently. it's like selling "one size fits all" t-shirts. i recommend simple kernel or trinity, they are the most stable ones on my phone apart from stock obviously.
Aktifit said:
had the same issue, just use another kernel or raise voltages. i've got no idea why everyone recommends matr1x, UV by default just doesn't make sense since every cpu behaves differently. it's like selling "one size fits all" t-shirts. i recommend simple kernel or trinity, they are the most stable ones on my phone apart from stock obviously.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
The most known product doesn't mean it's the more fitting for everyone. It just means it's popular. *shrugs*
I'd be willing to bet that a lot of the people using it don't even know it's undervolted, sadly.
thankyou for the replies...i will try the trinity kernel
You all argue about matrix yeah its undervolted so?? You need to raise your voltage to to make it stable because not all phones can handle undervolted values. It's been address millions times and you all still argue.? Goddamit!! (Bunch of noobs) try to solve the problem first before suggesting another kernel. It so irritating you all. I'm sure matrix dev despise you all because of your.ignorance.
Sent from my Nexus S®
chronophase1 said:
I'd be willing to bet that a lot of the people using it don't even know it's undervolted, sadly.
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I am guessing most people do know that it is undervolted. If they don't, I wouldn't understand why. He plainly states that if you have freezing issues to raise your voltages right in the FAQ. I have been running the Matr1x since gb and have never had issues with the undervoting. Perhaps your phone can't take it.
If people aren't smart enough to read what the developer has to say, why would he set it to the higher voltages and expect users to move the voltages down themselves. You imply the common user is not smart enough to do it themselves. So what does that leave the developer to do? He can make it like he thinks it should be or make it for the idiots that can't or won't read the op comments.
People need to understand kernels run differently on every phone. So instead of whining they should just move on.
________________
Just Flash It !!!
did u wipe dalvik cache...
Skunk Ape1 said:
I am guessing most people do know that it is undervolted. If they don't, I wouldn't understand why. He plainly states that if you have freezing issues to raise your voltages right in the FAQ. I have been running the Matr1x since gb and have never had issues with the undervoting. Perhaps your phone can't take it.
If people aren't smart enough to read what the developer has to say, why would he set it to the higher voltages and expect users to move the voltages down themselves. You imply the common user is not smart enough to do it themselves. So what does that leave the developer to do? He can make it like he thinks it should be or make it for the idiots that can't or won't read the op comments.
People need to understand kernels run differently on every phone. So instead of whining they should just move on.
________________
Just Flash It !!!
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Or that the common user is prone to not reading and just going ahead and flashing.
Seriously, coffees have "CAUTION: HOT!" written on them. I pretty much lost faith in "common users" a long time ago.
Skunk Ape1 said:
I am guessing most people do know that it is undervolted. If they don't, I wouldn't understand why. He plainly states that if you have freezing issues to raise your voltages right in the FAQ!
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Exactly! Read everything first. Educate your self before attempting anything. Just because you can flash doesn't mean you should without understanding anything about what it does or will do to your phone. FAQ is there for you to become familiar with what issues have happened and might happen to you. Yes the Matrix thread is long but I read a lot of it to understand what it was, issues and what others are saying. Just like any ROM, Kernel or mod you plan on trying, read the thread first. :thumbup:
Hope I don't sound like I'm complaining but most threads are started or answered wrong because of this. Good luck :thumbup:
Sent from my Nexus S using xda premium
This is what I was getting at and it somehow got interpreted wrong. It wasn't a dig at mathkid and any of the regular users on here. There are a lot of new users on here and many flash stuff excitedly and don't fully read stuff. I've been there before. Its still a common mistake.
Sent by pocket technology.
I'm currently running CM10 Nightly + Air Kernel r211
and I've been trying to overclock my NS for a while now with NS Tools but I keep getting reboots.
I've tried 1200mhz with SmartassV2, Ondemandx, Ondemand, Intellidemand. With vr, noop or deadline schedulers...
Nothing seems to work.
I can't seem to find any guide on how to properly tweak the voltages without damaging my phone?
Any help appreciated.
cyrus_e said:
I'm currently running CM10 Nightly + Air Kernel r211
and I've been trying to overclock my NS for a while now with NS Tools but I keep getting reboots.
I've tried 1200mhz with SmartassV2, Ondemandx, Ondemand, Intellidemand. With vr, noop or deadline schedulers...
Nothing seems to work.
I can't seem to find any guide on how to properly tweak the voltages without damaging my phone?
Any help appreciated.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Surprise! Overclocking can lead to instabilities. Read on overclocking as a whole, and overclocking on Android phones to understand the concept and why you are getting these results. Overclocking isn't a warranty you'll be able to get a higher frequency, all phones are different and someone phone might be able to overclock a lot while another one not at all.
polobunny said:
Surprise! Overclocking can lead to instabilities. Read on overclocking as a whole, and overclocking on Android phones to understand the concept and why you are getting these results. Overclocking isn't a warranty you'll be able to get a higher frequency, all phones are different and someone phone might be able to overclock a lot while another one not at all.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Not helpful, buddy.
Anyone else?
I'm going to try Marmite 4.7 kernel (seems to be more stable with 1.2 OCing). Will report back.
cyrus_e said:
Not helpful, buddy.
Anyone else?
I'm going to try Marmite 4.7 kernel (seems to be more stable with 1.2 OCing). Will report back.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Actually very helpful. Do your research. There's no magic to overclocking, one settings aren't useful for someone else, if only as a starting base. Trial and error until you find something stable.
Once again, all information can be found using the magical search function and your old pal Google.
Edit: Also as a free candy, governor has jack s#%! to do with overclocking.
polobunny said:
Actually very helpful. Do your research. There's no magic to overclocking, one settings aren't useful for someone else, if only as a starting base. Trial and error until you find something stable.
Once again, all information can be found using the magical search function and your old pal Google.
Edit: Also as a free candy, governor has jack s#%! to do with overclocking.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
You're not the judge of saying if your ****ty condescending replies are actually helpful to me or the community.
I am telling you that you are not being helpful by acting obnoxious and telling me to do my research when that's what I have been doing for the past 2 weeks.
Please stop posting unless you are going to be actually helpful.
ANYWAY,
I have just updated to latest CM10 nightly and flashed Marmite 4.7V. OC'd to 1.2Ghz without touching any voltages. So far so good! Opened a few apps and played around a couple of games. No reboots yet!
I can say that Air Kernel is pretty unstable with any OCing. On my phone (i9020A) anyway.
Hopefully this thread will help anyone else searching for OC stability with custom kernels.
I will keep updating if I encounter any problems.
Update:
I am experiencing much better performance! Real happy with how smooth Marmite is, and very stable with 1.2Ghz.
Absolutely no lag, no failure for launcher/drawer. Games run smoother. Chrome browser is actually faster.
I am using SmartAssV2 Governor with Deadline scheduler.
cyrus_e said:
You're not the judge of saying if your ****ty condescending replies are actually helpful to me or the community.
I am clearly tell you that you are not being helpful by acting obnoxious and telling me to do my research when that's what I have been doing for the past 2 weeks.
Please stop posting unless you are going to be actually helpful.
ANYWAY,
I have just updated to latest CM10 nightly and flashed Marmite 4.7V. OC'd to 1.2Ghz without touching any voltages. So far so good! Opened a few apps and played around a couple of games. No reboots yet!
I can say that Air Kernel is pretty unstable with any OCing. On my phone (i9020A) anyway.
Hopefully this thread will help anyone else searching for OC stability with custom kernels.
I will keep updating if I encounter any problems.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
So for the past 2 weeks you have been researching but did not know governor had nothing to do with overclocking, or haven't found good voltages to start with?
You run a nightly to test overclocking?
You my friend, are not only a moron, but you have done a very sad attempt at stepping on someone's head to excuse your indolence. These forums are chockful of information regarding overclocking and there's quite a few posts with NEARLY global voltages for the Nexus S phone, both INT and ARM. They do not guarantee you a stable overclock but offer you a good base to start with. Taking a few minutes of your time you could also go and check the sources of the many kernels that offer/offered overclocking (Matr1x, AIR, Marmite, iNK, Trinity etc etc) to see what voltages they have set for different steps, once again to give you a good eyeball figure.
Do yourself a favor and keep your mouth shut if you're only going to spew garbage. Have fun with your one click software.
Actually, he was pretty helpful. Why you have to dog on him for an answer that's spread all over the internet is beyond me. Threads like these do nothing for anyone when there are already boat loads of answers spread all over the internet. Plus, it took you all of two hours to try a different, much more stable kernel to solve your problem.
Edit- I got beat to reply. Either way, my response still holds merit in my eyes.
CrackerTeg said:
Actually, he was pretty helpful. Why you have to dog on him for an answer that's spread all over the internet is beyond me. Threads like these do nothing for anyone when there are already boat loads of answers spread all over the internet. Plus, it took you all of two hours to try a different, much more stable kernel to solve your problem.
Edit- I got beat to reply. Either way, my response still holds merit in my eyes.
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Click to collapse
Nope not helpful at all. The answer is not spread all over the internet or these forums, as I've been trying to search for them for weeks now. Both of you are hilarious morons. You keep showing off and acting all 'know-it-all' but none of you have actually linked to any helpful source/thread explaining or describing the things you're bragging about.
Telling people to 'search' around and stop posting threads doesn't help the community. I posted the thread about something that I was not able to find an answer to by searching in the forums or on Google.
Now instead of arguing like a bunch of idiotic 5 year olds, I challenge you to link me to a thread that clearly explains custom voltage tweaks or a guide that has instructions on how to properly overclock the Nexus S.
Also, having "PLEASE PRESS THANKS IF I WAS HELPFUL" in your signature is absolutely pathetic. Grow the f' up.
cyrus_e said:
Nope not helpful at all. The answer is not spread all over the internet or these forums, as I've been trying to search for them for weeks now. Both of you are hilarious morons. You keep showing off and acting all 'know-it-all' but none of you have actually linked to any helpful source/thread explaining or describing the things you're bragging about.
Telling people to 'search' around and stop posting threads doesn't help the community. I posted the thread about something that I was not able to find an answer to by searching in the forums or on Google.
Now instead of arguing like a bunch of idiotic 5 year olds, I challenge you to link me to a thread that clearly explains custom voltage tweaks or a guide that has instructions on how to properly overclock the Nexus S.
Also, having "PLEASE PRESS THANKS IF I WAS HELPFUL" in your signature is absolutely pathetic. Grow the f' up.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Overclocking Android phone has 8,500000 results here on Google for me.
Here's a random one, using a very known software (tada SetCPU!)
http://www.tomsguide.com/us/overclock-android-device,review-1762-5.html
Here's a software targeted at the Nexus S to control various parameters, including frequency and voltages
http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=1333696
Here's a thread pertaining to LiveOC voltage, which is bus overclocking that will affect both the CPU and GPU
http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=1335429
All of these contain information regarding the voltages that are set for different frequency steps:
Bedalus kernel github (sources)
http://github.com/bedalus
Air kernel github
https://github.com/edoko/AIR-Kernel_ICS
Morfic trinity github
http://morfic.euroskank.com/git/
iNK kernel sources
https://bitbucket.org/RcrdBrt/ink-kernel
Now, are you done or do you need me to come and press the right things on your screen?
polobunny said:
Overclocking Android phone has 8,500000 results here on Google for me.
Here's a random one, using a very known software (tada SetCPU!)
http://www.tomsguide.com/us/overclock-android-device,review-1762-5.html
Here's a software targeted at the Nexus S to control various parameters, including frequency and voltages
http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=1333696
Here's a thread pertaining to LiveOC voltage, which is bus overclocking that will affect both the CPU and GPU
http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=1335429
All of these contain information regarding the voltages that are set for different frequency steps:
Bedalus kernel github (sources)
http://github.com/bedalus
Air kernel github
https://github.com/edoko/AIR-Kernel_ICS
Morfic trinity github
http://morfic.euroskank.com/git/
iNK kernel sources
https://bitbucket.org/RcrdBrt/ink-kernel
Now, are you done or do you need me to come and press the right things on your screen?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
...win
Sent from my Nexus S using xda app-developers app
polobunny said:
Overclocking Android phone has 8,500000 results here on Google for me.
Here's a random one, using a very known software (tada SetCPU!)
http://www.tomsguide.com/us/overclock-android-device,review-1762-5.html
Here's a software targeted at the Nexus S to control various parameters, including frequency and voltages
http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=1333696
Here's a thread pertaining to LiveOC voltage, which is bus overclocking that will affect both the CPU and GPU
http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=1335429
All of these contain information regarding the voltages that are set for different frequency steps:
Bedalus kernel github (sources)
http://github.com/bedalus
Air kernel github
https://github.com/edoko/AIR-Kernel_ICS
Morfic trinity github
http://morfic.euroskank.com/git/
iNK kernel sources
https://bitbucket.org/RcrdBrt/ink-kernel
Now, are you done or do you need me to come and press the right things on your screen?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
BOOM!
Now that is one helpful post! Thanks for your help!!! :highfive:
cyrus_e said:
BOOM!
Now that is one helpful post! Thanks for your help!!! :highfive:
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
And you'll know it took me all but 5 minutes to seek this information.
And the OP becomes the moron. How about you stop with the insults? I'm surprised he even went so far to post all those links. I sure as hell wouldn't of.
using latest air kernel.
1200mhz stable volt for me :
int: 1100 . arm: 1350mv..try change voltages in nstool for stability..