Files
battery_life/docs/powertop-guide.md
root ff38460eeb Initial commit: Battery Life Optimization toolkit with TLP and PowerTOP
- Complete installation and uninstallation scripts
- Optimized TLP configuration for maximum battery life
- PowerTOP analysis and auto-tune functionality
- Real-time battery monitoring with detailed stats
- ThinkPad-specific optimizations and battery thresholds
- Comprehensive documentation and usage guides
- Tested on ThinkPad T14 Gen 1 with 13% power reduction
2025-09-29 12:58:11 +02:00

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Markdown

# PowerTOP Usage Guide
## Overview
PowerTOP is a Linux tool to diagnose issues with power consumption and power management. It provides detailed information about power usage by various system components and suggests optimizations.
## Installation Verification
After running the installation script, verify PowerTOP is installed:
```bash
# Check PowerTOP version
powertop --version
# Quick test (requires sudo)
sudo powertop --time=5
```
## Basic Usage
### Interactive Mode
```bash
# Launch PowerTOP in interactive mode
sudo powertop
```
**Navigation:**
- `Tab`: Switch between tabs
- `Enter`: Toggle tunables
- `q`: Quit
- Arrow keys: Navigate lists
### Tabs Overview
1. **Overview**: General system power consumption
2. **Idle stats**: CPU idle state statistics
3. **Frequency stats**: CPU frequency usage
4. **Device stats**: Individual device power usage
5. **Tunables**: Available power optimizations
## Command Line Usage
### Generate Reports
```bash
# Generate HTML report (60 seconds)
sudo powertop --html=report.html --time=60
# Generate CSV report
sudo powertop --csv=report.csv --time=60
# Custom duration
sudo powertop --html=report.html --time=120
```
### Auto-tune Mode
```bash
# Apply all available optimizations
sudo powertop --auto-tune
# View what would be changed (dry-run)
sudo powertop --auto-tune --debug
```
**Note:** Auto-tune changes are temporary and reset on reboot.
## Using the PowerTOP Analysis Script
Our custom script (`scripts/powertop-analyze.sh`) provides enhanced functionality:
### Basic Report Generation
```bash
# Generate 60-second HTML report
./scripts/powertop-analyze.sh
# Custom duration and format
./scripts/powertop-analyze.sh --duration 120 --format csv
# Different output directory
./scripts/powertop-analyze.sh --output /tmp/reports
```
### Apply Optimizations
```bash
# Apply PowerTOP auto-tune
./scripts/powertop-analyze.sh --auto-tune
# Quick system summary
./scripts/powertop-analyze.sh --quick
```
### View Reports
```bash
# Open latest report in browser
./scripts/powertop-analyze.sh --show-report
# List all generated reports
ls -la ~/.battery-optimizer/reports/
```
## Understanding Reports
### HTML Report Sections
1. **System Information**
- Hardware details
- Kernel version
- System uptime
2. **Power Consumption Overview**
- Total system power draw
- Battery discharge rate
- Power source information
3. **Top Power Consumers**
- Applications using most power
- Hardware devices consuming power
- System services impact
4. **Processor Information**
- CPU frequency usage
- Idle state statistics
- Core utilization
5. **Device Power Management**
- ASPM status
- Runtime PM status
- USB autosuspend status
6. **Tunables**
- Available optimizations
- Current status (Good/Bad)
- Recommended changes
### Key Metrics to Monitor
1. **Power Consumption (Watts)**
- Lower is better
- Typical laptop: 8-15W idle, 25-45W under load
2. **Wakeups per Second**
- Lower is better for battery life
- Target: <100 wakeups/second
3. **CPU Usage**
- Identify power-hungry applications
- Background processes impact
## Optimization Categories
### CPU Optimizations
```bash
# CPU governor (applied by TLP)
echo 'powersave' | sudo tee /sys/devices/system/cpu/cpu*/cpufreq/scaling_governor
# CPU idle states
# Managed automatically by kernel
```
### Device Power Management
```bash
# Enable ASPM (PCIe power saving)
echo 'powersave' | sudo tee /sys/module/pcie_aspm/parameters/policy
# Runtime PM for devices
echo 'auto' | sudo tee /sys/bus/pci/devices/*/power/control
```
### USB Power Management
```bash
# Enable USB autosuspend
echo '1' | sudo tee /sys/module/usbcore/parameters/autosuspend
# Per-device control
echo 'auto' | sudo tee /sys/bus/usb/devices/*/power/control
```
### Audio Power Saving
```bash
# Enable audio power saving
echo '1' | sudo tee /sys/module/snd_hda_intel/parameters/power_save
```
## Making Optimizations Permanent
### Method 1: Systemd Service (Recommended)
Our installation script creates a PowerTOP service:
```bash
# Check service status
systemctl status powertop.service
# Enable auto-tune on boot
sudo systemctl enable powertop.service
# Manually run auto-tune
sudo systemctl start powertop.service
```
### Method 2: Custom Scripts
Create startup scripts in `/etc/rc.local` or systemd services:
```bash
# Example optimization script
#!/bin/bash
echo 'auto' > /sys/bus/pci/devices/*/power/control
echo 'min_power' > /sys/class/scsi_host/*/link_power_management_policy
```
### Method 3: TLP Integration
Most PowerTOP optimizations are already included in our TLP configuration.
## Troubleshooting
### Common Issues
1. **PowerTOP requires root privileges**
- This is normal for hardware access
- Always use `sudo powertop`
2. **No power consumption data**
- Check if running on battery
- Ensure ACPI support in kernel
- Some virtual machines don't report power data
3. **Optimizations not persisting**
- Use systemd service for permanent changes
- Check for conflicting power managers
### Debug Commands
```bash
# Check kernel power management support
ls /sys/class/power_supply/
# Verify ACPI tables
sudo acpidump | head -20
# Check for power management conflicts
systemctl list-units | grep power
```
## Best Practices
### Regular Monitoring
1. **Weekly Reports**: Generate PowerTOP reports to track trends
2. **Before/After Testing**: Measure impact of configuration changes
3. **Application Profiling**: Identify power-hungry applications
### Analysis Workflow
1. **Baseline Measurement**: Record power consumption before changes
2. **Apply Optimizations**: Use systematic approach
3. **Measure Impact**: Generate new reports
4. **Document Changes**: Keep track of what works
### Report Interpretation
1. **Focus on Top Consumers**: Address highest impact items first
2. **Check Tunables**: Apply "Bad" recommendations carefully
3. **Monitor Trends**: Look for patterns over time
4. **Validate Changes**: Ensure functionality isn't compromised
## Integration with Other Tools
### With TLP
PowerTOP and TLP complement each other:
- TLP: Provides systematic, persistent power management
- PowerTOP: Offers detailed analysis and additional optimizations
### With System Monitoring
```bash
# Combine with system monitoring
./scripts/powertop-analyze.sh &
./scripts/battery-monitor.sh --watch
```
### With Performance Tools
```bash
# Monitor performance impact
htop &
sudo powertop --auto-tune
# Check if system remains responsive
```
## Advanced Usage
### Automated Analysis
```bash
#!/bin/bash
# Daily power analysis script
DATE=$(date +%Y%m%d)
sudo powertop --html=/var/log/powertop_${DATE}.html --time=3600
# Email report or upload to monitoring system
```
### Custom Reporting
```bash
# Extract specific data from CSV reports
awk -F',' 'NR>1 {print $1,$3}' report.csv | sort -k2 -nr | head -10
```
### Integration with Monitoring Systems
PowerTOP data can be integrated with:
- Grafana dashboards
- Nagios monitoring
- Custom logging systems
---
This guide should be used alongside the PowerTOP analysis script provided in this repository for optimal power management.