add p50 and p51

This commit is contained in:
Chris McDonough 2022-07-04 23:24:35 -04:00
parent 3bf48d3587
commit f90db4cb9e
3 changed files with 203 additions and 0 deletions

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@ -124,6 +124,8 @@ See code for all available configurations.
| [Lenovo ThinkPad P1 Gen 3](lenovo/thinkpad/p1/3th-gen) | `<nixos-hardware/lenovo/thinkpad/p1/3th-gen>` | | [Lenovo ThinkPad P1 Gen 3](lenovo/thinkpad/p1/3th-gen) | `<nixos-hardware/lenovo/thinkpad/p1/3th-gen>` |
| [Lenovo ThinkPad P14s AMD Gen 2](lenovo/thinkpad/p14s/amd/gen2) | `<nixos-hardware/lenovo/thinkpad/p14s/amd/gen2>` | | [Lenovo ThinkPad P14s AMD Gen 2](lenovo/thinkpad/p14s/amd/gen2) | `<nixos-hardware/lenovo/thinkpad/p14s/amd/gen2>` |
| [Lenovo ThinkPad P1](thinkpad/p1) | `<nixos-hardware/lenovo/thinkpad/p1>` | | [Lenovo ThinkPad P1](thinkpad/p1) | `<nixos-hardware/lenovo/thinkpad/p1>` |
| [Lenovo ThinkPad P50](lenovo/thinkpad/p50) | `<nixos-hardware/lenovo/thinkpad/p50>` |
| [Lenovo ThinkPad P51](lenovo/thinkpad/p51) | `<nixos-hardware/lenovo/thinkpad/p51>` |
| [Lenovo ThinkPad P53](lenovo/thinkpad/p53) | `<nixos-hardware/lenovo/thinkpad/p53>` | | [Lenovo ThinkPad P53](lenovo/thinkpad/p53) | `<nixos-hardware/lenovo/thinkpad/p53>` |
| [Lenovo ThinkPad T14 AMD Gen 1](lenovo/thinkpad/t14/amd/gen1) | `<nixos-hardware/lenovo/thinkpad/t14/amd/gen1>` | | [Lenovo ThinkPad T14 AMD Gen 1](lenovo/thinkpad/t14/amd/gen1) | `<nixos-hardware/lenovo/thinkpad/t14/amd/gen1>` |
| [Lenovo ThinkPad T14 AMD Gen 2](lenovo/thinkpad/t14/amd/gen2) | `<nixos-hardware/lenovo/thinkpad/t14/amd/gen2>` | | [Lenovo ThinkPad T14 AMD Gen 2](lenovo/thinkpad/t14/amd/gen2) | `<nixos-hardware/lenovo/thinkpad/t14/amd/gen2>` |

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@ -0,0 +1,100 @@
{ lib, ... }:
{
imports = [
../../../common/gpu/nvidia.nix
../../../common/cpu/intel
../../../common/pc/laptop/acpi_call.nix
../.
];
hardware = {
nvidia = {
prime = {
intelBusId = "PCI:0:2:0";
nvidiaBusId = "PCI:1:0:0";
};
};
# is this too much? It's convenient for Steam.
opengl = {
driSupport = lib.mkDefault true;
driSupport32Bit = lib.mkDefault true;
};
};
# Sleep
# -----
#
# The system will not resume from sleep properly while on battery power in
# either offload mode or sync mode. When it tries to resume, it gets to a
# state with a cursor in the top left hand side of the panel, the power LED
# goes from flashing to solid, and thereafter cannot be interacted with (even
# over SSH) and must be power cycled forcefully. Sometimes it doesn't even
# finish going to sleep before this behavior kicks in.
#
# When on AC, the machine either wakes up from sleep before being asked to
# (or maybe never gets to sleep state), or it goes into a sleep state and it
# appears consistently resume properly when it does.
#
# But the machine actually sleeps and resumes reliably when tlp is disabled
# fully or partially. Disabling RUNTIME_PM and AHCI_RUNTIME_PM appears to be
# enough to allow it to work when tlp is active. I couldn't figure out a
# more granular way to get it working, despite trying to do a per-device
# binary search via powertop.
#
# My personal configuration to make this work looks like this:
#
# {config, lib, ...}:
#
# {
# services.tlp = {
# settings = {
# # DISK_DEVICES must be specified for AHCI_RUNTIME_PM settings to work right.
# DISK_DEVICES = "nvme0n1 nvme1n1 sda sdb";
#
# # with AHCI_RUNTIME_PM_ON_AC/BAT set to defaults in battery mode, P51
# # can't resume from sleep and P50 can't go to sleep.
# AHCI_RUNTIME_PM_ON_AC = "on";
# AHCI_RUNTIME_PM_ON_BAT = "on";
#
# # with RUNTIME_PM_ON_BAT/AC set to defaults, P50/P51 can't go to sleep
# RUNTIME_PM_ON_AC = "on";
# RUNTIME_PM_ON_BAT = "on";
# };
# };
# }
#
# I'm thinking this is too aggressive to put into shared config, and folks may
# be concerned with the hit on battery life.
#
# throttled vs. thermald
# -----------------------
#
# NB: the p53 profile currently uses throttled to prevent too-eager CPU
# throttling. I understand throttled to have been a workaround solution at
# the time the p53 profile was created (throttled's original name was
# "lenovo_fix"). thermald would have been preferred if it worked at the
# time.
#
# I read
# https://wiki.archlinux.org/title/Lenovo_ThinkPad_X1_Carbon_(Gen_6)#Power_management.2FThrottling_issues
# as saying that thermald is fixed under the circumstance that led to the
# development of throttled given version 5.12+ of the kernel combined
# with version 2.4.3+ of thermald. At the time of this writing, the
# stable NixOS kernel is 5.15 and 2.4.9 of thermald.
#
# In the meantime, I also ran the "s-tui" program which can stress test the
# system, while eyeing up the core temps and CPU frequency under three
# scenarios: under thermald, under throttled, and with neither. None of the
# scenarios seem to have massively improved fan behavior, core temps, or
# average CPU frequency than another. The highest core temp always seems to
# hover around 90 degrees C, the lowest CPU Ghz around 3.4 on a 3.8Ghz machine.
#
# I ended up choosing throttled because subjectively, the fans seem quieter
# when it's stressed and it allows the average temps to get a degree or two
# higher when running throttled than when running in the other two scenarios,
# but still substantially under critical temp.
services.throttled.enable = lib.mkDefault true;
}

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@ -0,0 +1,101 @@
{ lib, ... }:
{
imports = [
../../../common/gpu/nvidia.nix
../../../common/cpu/intel
../../../common/cpu/intel/kaby-lake
../../../common/pc/laptop/acpi_call.nix
../.
];
hardware = {
nvidia = {
prime = {
intelBusId = "PCI:0:2:0";
nvidiaBusId = "PCI:1:0:0";
};
};
# is this too much? It's convenient for Steam.
opengl = {
driSupport = lib.mkDefault true;
driSupport32Bit = lib.mkDefault true;
};
};
# Sleep
# -----
#
# The system will not resume from sleep properly while on battery power in
# either offload mode or sync mode. When it tries to resume, it gets to a
# state with a cursor in the top left hand side of the panel, the power LED
# goes from flashing to solid, and thereafter cannot be interacted with (even
# over SSH) and must be power cycled forcefully. Sometimes it doesn't even
# finish going to sleep before this behavior kicks in.
#
# When on AC, the machine either wakes up from sleep before being asked to
# (or maybe never gets to sleep state), or it goes into a sleep state and it
# appears consistently resume properly when it does.
#
# But the machine actually sleeps and resumes reliably when tlp is disabled
# fully or partially. Disabling RUNTIME_PM and AHCI_RUNTIME_PM appears to be
# enough to allow it to work when tlp is active. I couldn't figure out a
# more granular way to get it working, despite trying to do a per-device
# binary search via powertop.
#
# My personal configuration to make sleep work looks like this:
#
# {config, lib, ...}:
#
# {
# services.tlp = {
# settings = {
# # DISK_DEVICES must be specified for AHCI_RUNTIME_PM settings to work right.
# DISK_DEVICES = "nvme0n1 nvme1n1 sda sdb";
#
# # with AHCI_RUNTIME_PM_ON_AC/BAT set to defaults in battery mode, P51
# # can't resume from sleep and P50 can't go to sleep.
# AHCI_RUNTIME_PM_ON_AC = "on";
# AHCI_RUNTIME_PM_ON_BAT = "on";
#
# # with RUNTIME_PM_ON_BAT/AC set to defaults, P50/P51 can't go to sleep
# RUNTIME_PM_ON_AC = "on";
# RUNTIME_PM_ON_BAT = "on";
# };
# };
# }
#
# I'm thinking this is too aggressive to put into shared config, and folks may
# be concerned with the hit on battery life.
#
# throttled vs. thermald
# -----------------------
#
# NB: the p53 profile currently uses throttled to prevent too-eager CPU
# throttling. I understand throttled to have been a workaround solution at
# the time the p53 profile was created (throttled's original name was
# "lenovo_fix"). thermald would have been preferred if it worked at the
# time.
#
# I read
# https://wiki.archlinux.org/title/Lenovo_ThinkPad_X1_Carbon_(Gen_6)#Power_management.2FThrottling_issues
# as saying that thermald is fixed under the circumstance that led to the
# development of throttled given version 5.12+ of the kernel combined
# with version 2.4.3+ of thermald. At the time of this writing, the
# stable NixOS kernel is 5.15 and 2.4.9 of thermald.
#
# In the meantime, I also ran the "s-tui" program which can stress test the
# system, while eyeing up the core temps and CPU frequency under three
# scenarios: under thermald, under throttled, and with neither. None of the
# scenarios seem to have massively improved fan behavior, core temps, or
# average CPU frequency than another. The highest core temp always seems to
# hover around 90 degrees C, the lowest CPU Ghz around 3.4 on a 3.8Ghz machine.
#
# I ended up choosing throttled because subjectively, the fans seem quieter
# when it's stressed and it allows the average temps to get a degree or two
# higher when running throttled than when running in the other two scenarios,
# but still substantially under critical temp.
services.throttled.enable = lib.mkDefault true;
}