Advanced Interactive Governor Tweaks - Xiaomi Mi 4

Hi,
Did anyone follow this thread to optimize CPU and battery life?
http://forum.xda-developers.com/nexus-5x/general/guide-advanced-interactive-governor-t3269557
Did you get nice results?
I want to try it on my phone. But I am a little bit lost.
Thanks.

I haven't tried above, but I can share my thoughts:
1. That thread is for Nexus+AOSP, params might not work for Mi4+MIUI.
2. If you wanna try those params on CM, I wonder what's the point. CM is already well optimized. Even with best kernel parameters, you'll never see a difference of night and day.
Is there something specific that you want to focus on for your device?

More battery life. But muy highest problem is mobile radio active bug... Any help?

Related

[Q] Whats the point of using custom kernel ?

What exactly do i get if i will flash custom kernel to my hammerhead ? What do they provide to make it noticeable to an user ?
m4nu4l said:
What exactly do i get if i will flash custom kernel to my hammerhead ? What do they provide to make it noticeable to an user ?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Custom kernels provide improvements, tweaks and more power to the user.
Some provide patches to use certain mods... E.g. Multirom patched kernels
Others allow your phone to be overclocked and undervolted. (Both CPU & GPU)
Some just save more battery than others, some have display tweaks included allowing the user to copy Samsung's saturated screens or even lower saturation.
Remember, not all kernels are compatible with all roms.
Read on the bases of the roms and kernel compatibility!
Happy flashing and good luck!
Valdorous said:
Custom kernels provide improvements, tweaks and more power to the user.
Some provide patches to use certain mods... E.g. Multirom patched kernels
Others allow your phone to be overclocked and undervolted. (Both CPU & GPU)
Some just save more battery than others, some have display tweaks included allowing the user to copy Samsung's saturated screens or even lower saturation.
Remember, not all kernels are compatible with all roms.
Read on the bases of the roms and kernel compatibility!
Happy flashing and good luck!
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Thanks for the explanation, feels like i'm not the guy who would need to overclock my nexus 5, its fast enough for me out of the box. Multi-rom sounds attracting tho.
Stock kernel works just fine
Sent from my Nexus 5 using XDA Premium 4 mobile app
m4nu4l said:
Thanks for the explanation, feels like i'm not the guy who would need to overclock my nexus 5, its fast enough for me out of the box. Multi-rom sounds attracting tho.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
One thing I forgot to mention are also the sound tweaks!
There are a LOT out there that are really good, although the App Viper4Android will always reign superior!
I do recommend you have a look at some of the kernels.
You can get 150% out of your battery with the right rom/kernel combo and probably more if you sacrifice some performance.
Just saying it's something a lot of people don't experiment with, I personally am a flash-aholic and need to flash new kernels and roms every other day!
Valdorous said:
I do recommend you have a look at some of the kernels.
You can get 150% out of your battery with the right rom/kernel combo and probably more if you sacrifice some performance.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
not true.
battery life is dependant on how you personally use your phone, how you set it up, what apps you use, and the quality of your phone/data connection. everything else, including kernels, play a very minor role in battery.
simms22 said:
not true.
battery life is dependant on how you personally use your phone, how you set it up, what apps you use, and the quality of your phone/data connection. everything else, including kernels, play a very minor role in battery.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Not necessarily, depending on the govenor (that comes with the kernel) your phone can idle better and some kernels have adjustments to the LMK (LowMemoryKiller) which handles background apps differently.
So in my opinion with the same usage and different handling of background apps, including undervolting and a battery saving governor.
You could easily hit 150% of the usual battery life,
Kernels play in that matter a HUGE role.
You could even throw in some display tweaks (in the battery's favour).
Valdorous said:
Not necessarily, depending on the govenor (that comes with the kernel) your phone can idle better and some kernels have adjustments to the LMK (LowMemoryKiller) which handles background apps differently.
So in my opinion with the same usage and different handling of background apps, including undervolting and a battery saving governor.
You could easily hit 150% of the usual battery life,
Kernels play in that matter a HUGE role.
You could even throw in some display tweaks (in the battery's favour).
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
first off, your "battery saving" govornor doesnt exist. it would depend on exactly what you are doing with the phone. the governor doesnt save battery, it tells your cpu how to behave with the incoming need. and they dont control how your phone idle. i use ondemand, and i doubt many phones idle better than mine.
undervolting DOES NOT save you battery, it can even use more than if not undervolted. the only benefit you will get from undervolting is a little less heat.
and again, kernels do not play a role in battery. if they did, every single person would be using the same battery saving kernel. but we are not. with every single kernel someone will have great battery, and someome will have terrible battery. that's because how ypu use it and your quality phone/data connection pre-decides what your battery will be like.
what you are believing are rumors. stuff people dont really know much about, but still keep repeating the non truth over and over. in reality, kernels have almost no influence in battery.
and btw, everything you can control with a custom kernel, you can with the stock kernel. and people get just as great battery on stock than on a custom kernel.
and yes, i do know what im talking about, ive been part of trinity kernel for 5 years now. and ive helped thousands with android and android related issues, including battery.
simms22 said:
first off, your "battery saving" govornor doesnt exist. it would depend on exactly what you are doing with the phone. the governor doesnt save battery, it tells your cpu how to behave with the incoming need. and they dont control how your phone idle. i use ondemand, and i doubt many phones idle better than mine.
undervolting DOES NOT save you battery, it can even use more than if not undervolted. the only benefit you will get from undervolting is a little less heat.
and again, kernels do not play a role in battery. if they did, every single person would be using the same battery saving kernel. but we are not. with every single kernel someone will have great battery, and someome will have terrible battery. that's because how ypu use it and your quality phone/data connection pre-decides what your battery will be like.
what you are believing are rumors. stuff people dont really know much about, but still keep repeating the non truth over and over. in reality, kernels have almost no influence in battery.
and btw, everything you can control with a custom kernel, you can with the stock kernel. and people get just as great battery on stock than on a custom kernel.
and yes, i do know what im talking about, ive been part of trinity kernel for 5 years now. and ive helped thousands with android and android related issues, including battery.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I know and have used your kernel.
If you noticed I said "In my opinion". No reason to get aggressive.
I have noticed something else.
And thought it worth sharing.
If I've offended you, I apologize.
Valdorous said:
I know and have used your kernel.
If you noticed I said "In my opinion". No reason to get aggressive.
I have noticed something else.
And thought it worth sharing.
If I've offended you, I apologize.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
oh gosh, please dont apologize. i also meant no offence to you.
its not you i am aggressive with btw, its that false info that just wont die. i had still many people do, but its not as bad as before. you dont need to wipe anything when flashing kernels. but, many people used to insist that its a must. i spent a lot of time fighting that falsehood, now i dont see it as much. its the same about battery. if there was a "magic" pill, everyone would be using it. but just as many people using any random kernel will get great battery life on a "battery" saving kernel, and just as many people will get bad battery life as well.
please, again, i didnt mean offence. im just trying to pass the truth around, thats all. its just that this kind of thing isnt an opinion, there is a truth and a false here. id never go against any persons opinion if it was just about opinion.
Yeah....at best....just changing from one kernel to another MAY affect your battery about 5 to 10 percent one way or the other. In other words.....the direct affect on battery is minimal.
The biggest myth in the threads are that rom/kernel combos make big differences in battery life.
Simply put, they don't.
And everything @simms22 said. ?
---------- Post added at 07:59 PM ---------- Previous post was at 07:57 PM ----------
And in modern devices anyway....undervolting does nothing but keep heat down a bit.....and under clocking has an extremely minor affect as well.
Don't believe, try it and see. ?
I get the same battery life on any ROM....any kernel.
You can make your own ultra powersaving mode or your own hyper performance mode...
I'm just using custom kernel for gamma control, s2w/s2s (which is very useful for me when reading some articles on Chrome), also for USB OTG mounting. Oh oh, and also for killing time, you know messing up with frequency and stuff lol
Well, personally I never believe about the effect on battery life by using this or that kernel since there are lots of things that can affect your battery life, and for my case data connection is the battery killer :angel:
What are you guys talking about??. No, I'm not a kernel dev BUT I have tried so many ROM's and kernels on different devices for a long time now and by experience I can say that they DO influence battery life. I have seen %~50 increase (compared to stock) and aso have experienced just 4 hours of battery because a buggy kernel patch.
They're not placebo when your device start to last 19 hours instead of just 13 like it did since you bought It.
lovetatfitties said:
What are you guys talking about??. No, I'm not a kernel dev BUT I have tried so many ROM's and kernels on different devices for a long time now and by experience I can say that they DO influence battery life. I have seen %~50 increase (compared to stock) and aso have experienced just 4 hours of battery because a buggy kernel patch.
They're not placebo when your device start to last 19 hours instead of just 13 like it did since you bought It.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
your cpu is set up differently with the custom kernel. thats why. its not the kernel itself. you can set up your cpu on stock so itll be like the custom kernel. its very easy if you are familiar with a few scripts and the root filesystems. for example, i run trinity kernel. with the way trinity kernel sets up my cpu, i get better than stock kernel in battery. trinity set my cpu to run all four cores always on, no hotplugging. it also disables mpdecision. i can set up the stock kernel that way as well. i can do it using a root file explorer, manually, or i can do it via script. and i do know people that run the stock kernel that just get fabulous battery life.
---------- Post added at 10:21 PM ---------- Previous post was at 09:55 PM ----------
there are things that you can do with kernel control apps as well.
Sometimes when you flash a kernel...and many times we flash a ROM right before.....you are only getting rid of a battery issue you previously had before you flashed. So with the clean start, of course you're battery will be much better (especially if you had an unfixed or unnoticed issue before)....and sorry to put it this way, but don't know how else to put it....but the less knowledgeable people think its the new kernel that's made such a huge. Pretty much all the most experienced people know kernels don't make a very big difference to battery life. You can flash clean stock with stock kernel and see a huge gain too if you had an issue before.
Test it yourselves. Flash your favorite ROM and some kernel one day. Go a few battery cycles without changing much or installing much. Then flash the same ROM and another kernel. Same changes and same few apps. And so on...
Eventually you'll get the point.
KJ said:
Sometimes when you flash a kernel...and many times we flash a ROM right before.....you are only getting rid of a battery issue you previously had before you flashed. So with the clean start, of course you're battery will be much better (especially if you had an unfixed or unnoticed issue before)....and sorry to put it this way, but don't know how else to put it....but the less knowledgeable people think its the new kernel that's made such a huge. Pretty much all the most experienced people know kernels don't make a very big difference to battery life. You can flash clean stock with stock kernel and see a huge gain too if you had an issue before.
Test it yourselves. Flash your favorite ROM and some kernel one day. Go a few battery cycles without changing much or installing much. Then flash the same ROM and another kernel. Same changes and same few apps. And so on...
Eventually you'll get the point.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
That right!
It's all about how you feel about your devices.
simms22 said:
your cpu is set up differently with the custom kernel. thats why. its not the kernel itself. you can set up your cpu on stock so itll be like the custom kernel. its very easy if you are familiar with a few scripts and the root filesystems. for example, i run trinity kernel. with the way trinity kernel sets up my cpu, i get better than stock kernel in battery. trinity set my cpu to run all four cores always on, no hotplugging. it also disables mpdecision. i can set up the stock kernel that way as well. i can do it using a root file explorer, manually, or i can do it via script. and i do know people that run the stock kernel that just get fabulous battery life.
---------- Post added at 10:21 PM ---------- Previous post was at 09:55 PM ----------
there are things that you can do with kernel control apps as well.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Ok man whatever, I don't like to argue about the color of the sky so.. Yeah..
Also, I think you should e-mail all the kernel devs and tell them that they're full of bs and that they all are wasting their time improving nothing. You should try to reach Linus Torvalds and tell him that he has to stop developing worthless software, that we all can mod our systems the way we want'em to behave and that we don't need support for newer technology. :good:
lovetatfitties said:
Ok man whatever, I don't like to argue about the color of the sky so.. Yeah..
Also, I think you should e-mail all the kernel devs and tell them that they're full of bs and that they all are wasting their time improving nothing. You should try to reach Linus Torvalds and tell him that he has to stop developing worthless software, that we all can mod our systems the way we want'em to behave and that we don't need support for newer technology. :good:
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
It's a good job YOU know what you're talking about, otherwise this thread would have been worthless
The point is you can do some customizations with custom kernels. Gamma control, usb fast charge, etc etc.
But battery life? I never see the difference even with the similar usage that I always do every single day, really, I'm living in Indonesia and the data connection is the battery killer that makes me swearing aaaaall the time lol
I have tried that kernel this kernel (except caf kernel), you name it, but still nothing different, except each of them has their own characteristics.
My own solution? I bought a powerbank, that's my magic pill when my phone is out of battery.
Please, don't think I'm bashing kernel devs out there, they do fantastic job with their creations and I hope they don't stop doing that, I myself using ElementalX, because I need the features that the dev offers to user like me.
Sorry if my English is that bad :/
lovetatfitties said:
Ok man whatever, I don't like to argue about the color of the sky so.. Yeah..
Also, I think you should e-mail all the kernel devs and tell them that they're full of bs and that they all are wasting their time improving nothing. You should try to reach Linus Torvalds and tell him that he has to stop developing worthless software, that we all can mod our systems the way we want'em to behave and that we don't need support for newer technology. :good:
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Sent from my Nexus 5 using Tapatalk

CM11 vs Stock? Anything better?

I've been using the nexus for a while, and although I like the stock rom, is CM11 better? Or any other rom in fact? And I guess when I say better I generally mean performance and possibly battery life? Would a kernal also affect this?
Sorry if I seem naive or anything. Recently switched from an ATT S4 with all its bootloaders and such..
"Best" ROM.
There is no such thing as a best ROM. The question itself is ambiguous. "Best" is obviously a subjective term.
What I want from a ROM may well differ from what you want from a ROM, ergo - what is best for me could be worst for you.
If you are asking what the most popular ROMs are, or which ROMs people are using, you can see which threads stay around on the first few pages (and have the most posts) in the Android Development or Original Android Development forums. You can also see what other people are running by reading the What are you running on your Nexus 5 thread.
If you are asking which is the most stable, being a Nexus device - they're all pretty stable.
If you are asking which is best on Battery, ROMs only affect battery if they have a feature that is badly coded. You will likely be able to read about this in the ROM threads. ROMs do not impact battery life. The only impact to battery life are your apps, your settings, how you use the phone and mostly, environmental issues such as Phone Signal.
For tips about improving battery life, please read [Battery Life Help] Troubleshoot battery issues here!
"Best" Kernel
Also, please note that as above, "best" is still subjective. What we all want from a kernel is different. Again, many people have the misconception that Kernels affect battery life. Let's get this cleared up. Although Kernel devs will build in optimisations and efficiencies that will improve battery life, these are very, VERY tiny...and if 1 kernel has these optimisations, they likely all have.
People will often say "Kernel x is better than kernel y for battery life". This is actually wrong. Kernels respond to user settings. Setting up the governor to favour either battery life or performance is simple enough to do, you just have to do some learning. The reason people think Kernel x is better than y is because developers set their kernels up with their preferred governor settings. This is what we refer to as out-of-the-box settings. The out-of-the-box settings for kernel x may well produce better battery results than the out-of-the-box settings for kernel y, which favour performance. The fact is, you as the user have the ability to tune kernel x or y to perform the same, be that battery or performance - so start learning how to do this yourselves - that way, you can choose the kernel based on the FEATURES you want, and not the fictional performance benefits of one kernel over another.
Hope this helps
The biggest thing is some of the customizations you can get with something like Xposed. A kernel might change things. You can always make a backup.
Sent from my Nexus 5 using XDA Free mobile app
@rootSU you should backup this answer to your clipboard and paste it again & again
Primokorn said:
@rootSU you should backup this answer to your clipboard and paste it again & again
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I did. I wrote it and added it to both evernote and "clipboard admin"
rootSU said:
I did. I wrote it and added it to both evernote and "clipboard admin"
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
You should add the following to the end:
[THREAD CLOSED]
CM and other ROMs that have SuperSU baked into the system (as opposed to have it installed as an app that shows up in the app drawer) can have difficulties with apps that won't work due to being rooted, and often times the apps you can use to temporarily block/hide root access won't work properly with SuperSU baked in. That's the big reason why I stopped using them. It's simpler to just root stock Android and use xposed modules that can replicate 95% of what CM brings to the table.
rootSU said:
"Best" ROM.
There is no such thing as a best ROM. The question itself is ambiguous. "Best" is obviously a subjective term.
What I want from a ROM may well differ from what you want from a ROM, ergo - what is best for me could be worst for you.
If you are asking what the most popular ROMs are, or which ROMs people are using, you can see which threads stay around on the first few pages (and have the most posts) in the Android Development or Original Android Development forums. You can also see what other people are running by reading the What are you running on your Nexus 5 thread.
If you are asking which is the most stable, being a Nexus device - they're all pretty stable.
If you are asking which is best on Battery, ROMs only affect battery if they have a feature that is badly coded. You will likely be able to read about this in the ROM threads. ROMs do not impact battery life. The only impact to battery life are your apps, your settings, how you use the phone and mostly, environmental issues such as Phone Signal.
For tips about improving battery life, please read [Battery Life Help] Troubleshoot battery issues here!
"Best" Kernel
Also, please note that as above, "best" is still subjective. What we all want from a kernel is different. Again, many people have the misconception that Kernels affect battery life. Let's get this cleared up. Although Kernel devs will build in optimisations and efficiencies that will improve battery life, these are very, VERY tiny...and if 1 kernel has these optimisations, they likely all have.
People will often say "Kernel x is better than kernel y for battery life". This is actually wrong. Kernels respond to user settings. Setting up the governor to favour either battery life or performance is simple enough to do, you just have to do some learning. The reason people think Kernel x is better than y is because developers set their kernels up with their preferred governor settings. This is what we refer to as out-of-the-box settings. The out-of-the-box settings for kernel x may well produce better battery results than the out-of-the-box settings for kernel y, which favour performance. The fact is, you as the user have the ability to tune kernel x or y to perform the same, be that battery or performance - so start learning how to do this yourselves - that way, you can choose the kernel based on the FEATURES you want, and not the fictional performance benefits of one kernel over another.
Hope this helps
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
an absolutely wonderful reply!
simms22 said:
an absolutely wonderful reply!
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
As long as someone takes.something away from it, I've done my job
Sent from my Nexus 5 using Tapatalk

need help choosing roms

im new to rooting, and finally i fixed my problem and updated to lolipop 5.0.1. i was just wondering whats the best rom out there right now i can install? thanks
OgFella said:
im new to rooting, and finally i fixed my problem and updated to lolipop 5.0.1. i was just wondering whats the best rom out there right now i can install? thanks
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
"Best" ROM.
There is no such thing as a best ROM. The question itself is ambiguous. "Best" is obviously a subjective term.
What I want from a ROM may well differ from what you want from a ROM, ergo - what is best for me could be worst for you.
If you are asking what the most popular ROMs are, or which ROMs people are using, you can see which threads stay around on the first few pages (and have the most posts) in the Android Development or Original Android Development forums. You can also see what other people are running by reading the What are you running on your Nexus 5 thread.
If you are asking which is the most stable, being a Nexus device - they're all pretty stable.
If you are asking which is best on Battery, ROMs only affect battery if they have a feature that is badly coded. You will likely be able to read about this in the ROM threads. ROMs do not impact battery life. The only impact to battery life are your apps, your settings, how you use the phone and mostly, environmental issues such as Phone Signal.
For tips about improving battery life, please read [Battery Life Help] Troubleshoot battery issues here!
"Best" Kernel
Also, please note that as above, "best" is still subjective. What we all want from a kernel is different. Again, many people have the misconception that Kernels affect battery life. Let's get this cleared up. Although Kernel devs will build in optimisations and efficiencies that will improve battery life, these are very, VERY tiny...and if 1 kernel has these optimisations, they likely all have.
People will often say "Kernel x is better than kernel y for battery life". This is actually wrong. Kernels respond to user settings. Setting up the governor to favour either battery life or performance is simple enough to do, you just have to do some learning. The reason people think Kernel x is better than y is because developers set their kernels up with their preferred governor settings. This is what we refer to as out-of-the-box settings. The out-of-the-box settings for kernel x may well produce better battery results than the out-of-the-box settings for kernel y, which favour performance. The fact is, you as the user have the ability to tune kernel x or y to perform the same, be that battery or performance - so start learning how to do this yourselves - that way, you can choose the kernel based on the FEATURES you want, and not the fictional performance benefits of one kernel over another.
Hope this helps
The more u try the Merrier! Happy holidays and flashing.
rootSU said:
"Best" ROM.
There is no such thing as a best ROM. The question itself is ambiguous. "Best" is obviously a subjective term.
What I want from a ROM may well differ from what you want from a ROM, ergo - what is best for me could be worst for you.
If you are asking what the most popular ROMs are, or which ROMs people are using, you can see which threads stay around on the first few pages (and have the most posts) in the Android Development or Original Android Development forums. You can also see what other people are running by reading the What are you running on your Nexus 5 thread.
If you are asking which is the most stable, being a Nexus device - they're all pretty stable.
If you are asking which is best on Battery, ROMs only affect battery if they have a feature that is badly coded. You will likely be able to read about this in the ROM threads. ROMs do not impact battery life. The only impact to battery life are your apps, your settings, how you use the phone and mostly, environmental issues such as Phone Signal.
For tips about improving battery life, please read [Battery Life Help] Troubleshoot battery issues here!
"Best" Kernel
Also, please note that as above, "best" is still subjective. What we all want from a kernel is different. Again, many people have the misconception that Kernels affect battery life. Let's get this cleared up. Although Kernel devs will build in optimisations and efficiencies that will improve battery life, these are very, VERY tiny...and if 1 kernel has these optimisations, they likely all have.
People will often say "Kernel x is better than kernel y for battery life". This is actually wrong. Kernels respond to user settings. Setting up the governor to favour either battery life or performance is simple enough to do, you just have to do some learning. The reason people think Kernel x is better than y is because developers set their kernels up with their preferred governor settings. This is what we refer to as out-of-the-box settings. The out-of-the-box settings for kernel x may well produce better battery results than the out-of-the-box settings for kernel y, which favour performance. The fact is, you as the user have the ability to tune kernel x or y to perform the same, be that battery or performance - so start learning how to do this yourselves - that way, you can choose the kernel based on the FEATURES you want, and not the fictional performance benefits of one kernel over another.
Hope this helps
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Thanks. For best i ment like popular haha ill try installing a couple to see what i like the best.
Fwiw. I like Slim

[Q] Questions about One

I'm new on this device, and i have some newbie questions
1. Why sometimes my screen kinda flash a bit? But i set the Adaptive Brightness off...
2. What is the best kernel for battery life? I want to try franco, but it seems it doesn't support CM 12.1
Thanks for answering
AndreIrawan97 said:
I'm new on this device, and i have some newbie questions
1. Why sometimes my screen kinda flash a bit? But i set the Adaptive Brightness off...
2. What is the best kernel for battery life? I want to try franco, but it seems it doesn't support CM 12.1
Thanks for answering
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
1. That's too vague, provide more information.
2. The best kernel for battery life is the one that offers you the best battery life after your own testing. Each device is different, only your own testing can answer this question.
AndreIrawan97 said:
I'm new on this device, and i have some newbie questions
1. Why sometimes my screen kinda flash a bit? But i set the Adaptive Brightness off...
2. What is the best kernel for battery life? I want to try franco, but it seems it doesn't support CM 12.1
Thanks for answering
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
1) It should not flicker. Try with a different ROM. If the issue continues, you might want to get your phone checked.
2) I have used Boeffla kernel and it can be easily monitored by an app by which you can underclock your CPU or put in under extreme power save modes. Give it a try! However it really depends on your use. You might want to try different ROMs as well. They provide various tweaks that will vary SOT that can be experienced by different users!
10k35h said:
1) It should not flicker. Try with a different ROM. If the issue continues, you might want to get your phone checked.
2) I have used Boeffla kernel and it can be easily monitored by an app by which you can underclock your CPU or put in under extreme power save modes. Give it a try! However it really depends on your use. You might want to try different ROMs as well. They provide various tweaks that will vary SOT that can be experienced by different users!
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
1. It seems a problem in 12.1. It doesn't appear in CM12S
2. Thanks for the answer

Battery and performance improve tweaks for moto x play

To all moto x play users around the world!! I would like to say hello first!
The next is that how to get more battery life and performance
First of all, your phone must be rooted(which says unlocked bootloader), the next is a custom rom, I recommend using squid2's Cm13 and his kernel too
Download kernel auditor from play store, then go to cpu in that, then change the governor to lionfish, after that go to gpu then the governor to simple_ondemand, after that, go to I/O scheduler and change the internal storage scheduler to bfq and restart make sure you have turned on the apply in boot option for all those three
Conclusion :
CPU GOVERNOR:lionfish
GPU GOVERNOR:simple_ondemand
I/O SCHEDULER :bfq
Finally thank you all for having a look at my thread
Below are the screenshots, you can have a look at them
And I welcome all kinds of critics and reviews from you people
What is outcome after doing that? Can you give any comparison on it so that people can easily see what changed for better performance. Thabks.
stevedat said:
What is outcome after doing that? Can you give any comparison on it so that people can easily see what changed for better performance. Thabks.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Thanks for your curiosity in my post! And I would like people to implement the things I have said above in the post, and I request them to give me the poll answers and actually after they do what I have said they won't regret doing that! And actually I am using them and I am experiencing the thrill of using that
Hey hey!
I appreciate you posting this thread, man! Cool setup! Mine is a little different, and I would encourage you to post your setup in my thread: Power Users: Post Your Optimal Setup!. This way we can create a repository of useful setups for different MXP users. I hope you take the time to do so, and thank you for posting!
Battery and heating problem
am using squid kernel with DU in my cell .... since from last some days am facing problems such as battery draining and heating problem.
can you help me to solve this ??
xpectedme094 said:
am using squid kernel with DU in my cell .... since from last some days am facing problems such as battery draining and heating problem.
can you help me to solve this ??
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Its because of the hispeed_freq that they set to the max 1651MHz. Its causing heating issues because your cpu constantly bumped to the max when you use your phone. Just switch it back to 1113MHz in kernel adiutor to reduce the heating.

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