BitCointransfers (OP)
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May 27, 2011, 01:22:11 PM |
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Hello Everyone,
Got my first 4x5830 rig up and running but can't for the life of me get the cards OC'd. Aticonfig won't allow it changes other than stock and AMDOverdriveCTRL is a mystery. Is there any other command line tool I can use to increase clock and drop the memory speed? I'm running the 11.04 Ubuntu as per the guide here on the forum...
Thanks!!
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molecular
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May 27, 2011, 01:36:52 PM |
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I got some code that does this using adl. No commandline-stuff, though, it's all hardcoded currently I could make it into a cmdline-tool, maybe with the following switches: -l (list cards and display clocks) -c <card number> (select card) -setcore <clock in mhz> (set core clock) -setram <clock in mhz> (set ram clock) example usage: aticontrol -c 0 -setcore 880 -setram 350 note: setting ram-clock using the method I use involves manipulating "performance levels" how about that? maybe we could crowdfund this, any pledgers?
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BitCointransfers (OP)
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May 27, 2011, 01:56:23 PM |
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Thats great your working on that, but what is everyone using now?
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molecular
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May 27, 2011, 02:05:00 PM |
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Thats great your working on that, but what is everyone using now?
Probably amdoverdrvctrl
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BitCointransfers (OP)
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May 27, 2011, 04:31:26 PM |
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Ive tried amdoverdrivectrl but can't get it to work... anything else?
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frozen
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May 27, 2011, 06:11:06 PM |
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Can you explain what doesn't work with amdoverdrivectrl? Do you get an error message? Take a look at AMDOverdriveCtrl --help. There are two parameters of significant value: -i and -b -i takes an index for the card you want to select. In my case, the 5830 shows up as index 3. -b is for batch mode. It won't start the gui and will just set the clock speeds and exit The final parameter is an overdrive configuration file that contains all the good clock settings. You can create one in the AMDOverdriveCtrl interface and save it. AMDOverdriveCtrl -i 3 -b 5830.ovdr <?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?> <OVERDRIVE_PROFILE> <PERFORMANCE_LEVEL level="2" gpu="97500" mem="30000" voltage="1160"/> <PERFORMANCE_LEVEL level="1" gpu="55000" mem="15000" voltage="1038"/> <PERFORMANCE_LEVEL level="0" gpu="15700" mem="15000" voltage="950"/> <FAN_SETTING percentage="50"/> <FAN_CTRL enabled="no"/> <FAN_CTRL_CURVE type="0"/> <FAN_CTRL_POINT nr="0" temperature="2000" percentage="0"/> <FAN_CTRL_POINT nr="1" temperature="4000" percentage="2500"/> <FAN_CTRL_POINT nr="2" temperature="6000" percentage="5000"/> <FAN_CTRL_POINT nr="3" temperature="8000" percentage="7500"/> <FAN_CTRL_POINT nr="4" temperature="10000" percentage="10000"/> <MONITOR_SAMPLE_TIME interval="10"/> <COLOR_PROFILE enabled="no" longitude="-13.000000" latitude="52.000000" color_temp_day="0" color_temp_night="0" transition="30"/> </OVERDRIVE_PROFILE> Using the above, I have a shell script that I can execute (over ssh, because my rig is in the basement): frozen@anarix:~/poclbm$ cat 5830.sh #!/bin/bash export DISPLAY=:0 AMDOverdriveCtrl -i 3 -b 5830.ovdr ./poclbm.py -u xxxxx_desktop5830 --pass xxxxxx -o xxxxx -p 8332 -v -d 2 -f 1 Works pretty well. I have an overdrive and a script for each card that I am running.
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BitCointransfers (OP)
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May 27, 2011, 06:53:31 PM |
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Your Awesome... any idea why AMDOverdriveCtrl shows I have 12 adapters instead of 4?.. also how hot do you run yours?
Thansks..
~$ AMDOverdriveCtrl --help INF: Nr. of Adapters: 12 INF: Adapter index: 0, active, ID:22278416, ATI Radeon HD 5800 Series INF: Adapter index: 1, inact., ID:22278416, ATI Radeon HD 5800 Series INF: Adapter index: 2, inact., ID:22278416, ATI Radeon HD 5800 Series INF: Adapter index: 3, active, ID:22888176, ATI Radeon HD 5800 Series INF: Adapter index: 4, inact., ID:22888176, ATI Radeon HD 5800 Series INF: Adapter index: 5, inact., ID:22888176, ATI Radeon HD 5800 Series INF: Adapter index: 6, active, ID:23452256, ATI Radeon HD 5800 Series INF: Adapter index: 7, inact., ID:23452256, ATI Radeon HD 5800 Series INF: Adapter index: 8, inact., ID:23452256, ATI Radeon HD 5800 Series INF: Adapter index: 9, active, ID:24016336, ATI Radeon HD 5800 Series INF: Adapter index: 10, inact., ID:24016336, ATI Radeon HD 5800 Series INF: Adapter index: 11, inact., ID:24016336, ATI Radeon HD 5800 Series
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frozen
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May 27, 2011, 07:39:00 PM |
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No, I don't know why there are so many inactive adapters. I think I read about it somewhere, can't remember. I run at about 70C for both cards. frozen@anarix:~$ ./gpu.sh 99% 99% 67.00 71.50
frozen@anarix:~$ cat gpu.sh #!/bin/bash DISPLAY=:0 aticonfig --adapter=all --odgc | awk '/GPU\ load/ { print $4 }' DISPLAY=:0 aticonfig --adapter=all --odgt | awk '/Temp/ { print $5 }'
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BitCointransfers (OP)
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May 27, 2011, 07:41:38 PM |
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thanks.. and yes I do get a error on the screen saying can't apply overdrive settings. the ovdr file you pasted, it has several performance levels, how do you choose the one you want... I want to run my cards at 1000 core 300 mem.... 100% fan.
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ius
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May 27, 2011, 07:48:45 PM |
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What does aticonfig say? Most likely your memory clock range is restricted by your card's bios.
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BitCointransfers (OP)
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May 27, 2011, 07:50:22 PM |
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~/poclbm$ aticonfig --odgc --adapter=all
Adapter 0 - ATI Radeon HD 5800 Series Core (MHz) Memory (MHz) Current Clocks : 875 900 Current Peak : 875 900 Configurable Peak Range : [600-875] [900-1200] GPU load : 99%
Adapter 1 - ATI Radeon HD 5800 Series Core (MHz) Memory (MHz) Current Clocks : 875 900 Current Peak : 875 900 Configurable Peak Range : [600-875] [900-1200] GPU load : 98%
Adapter 2 - ATI Radeon HD 5800 Series Core (MHz) Memory (MHz) Current Clocks : 875 900 Current Peak : 875 900 Configurable Peak Range : [600-875] [900-1200] GPU load : 98%
Adapter 3 - ATI Radeon HD 5800 Series Core (MHz) Memory (MHz) Current Clocks : 875 900 Current Peak : 875 900 Configurable Peak Range : [600-875] [900-1200] GPU load : 94%
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ius
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May 27, 2011, 07:57:00 PM |
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Lowest you can go is 900 MHz. The only 'easy' workaround is editing the bios using Radeon Bios Editor (on Windows I'm afraid).
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trentzb
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May 27, 2011, 08:06:01 PM |
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Your Awesome... any idea why AMDOverdriveCtrl shows I have 12 adapters instead of 4?.. also how hot do you run yours?
With ATI ADL an adapter != device|card ADL confused me also. Apparently an ADL adapter represents the adapter interfaces on the card, whether physically exposed or not, DVI, HDMI, DP. I had thought it represented a card also. aticonfig does not use ADL from what I can tell.
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molecular
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May 27, 2011, 11:37:44 PM |
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Lowest you can go is 900 MHz. The only 'easy' workaround is editing the bios using Radeon Bios Editor (on Windows I'm afraid).
That's not true (at least not for a 5970) Here's output of my tool using adl calls to modify the 3 performance levels. Adapter 0 (slave):, index 3: got ODParameters number performance levels: 3 number performance levels: 3 engine clock range: [8000..100000] step 500 memory clock range: [15000..150000] step 500 voltage range: [950..1050] step 5 GOT 3 performance Levels performance level 0: engine: 300.00 Mhz, memory: 150.00 Mhz, core: 1.038 V performance level 1: engine: 725.00 Mhz, memory: 150.00 Mhz, core: 1.038 V performance level 2: engine: 870.00 Mhz, memory: 400.00 Mhz, core: 1.050 V SET performance level successfully to the following values: performance level 0: engine: 300.00 Mhz, memory: 150.00 Mhz, core: 1.038 V performance level 1: engine: 725.00 Mhz, memory: 150.00 Mhz, core: 1.038 V performance level 2: engine: 880.00 Mhz, memory: 400.00 Mhz, core: 1.050 V
After that, I can even use aticonfig to set the ramclock to 150: goldesel ati_control # aticonfig --adapter=0 --od-getclocks
Adapter 0 - ATI Radeon HD 5900 Series Core (MHz) Memory (MHz) Current Clocks : 880 400 Current Peak : 880 400 Configurable Peak Range : [725-1000] [150-1500] GPU load : 0%
goldesel ati_control # aticonfig --adapter=0 --od-setclocks=880,150
Adapter 0 - ATI Radeon HD 5900 Series New Core Peak : 880 New Memory Peak : 150
goldesel ati_control # aticonfig --adapter=0 --od-getclocks
Adapter 0 - ATI Radeon HD 5900 Series Core (MHz) Memory (MHz) Current Clocks : 880 150 Current Peak : 880 150 Configurable Peak Range : [725-1000] [150-1500] GPU load : 0%
you may ask: why is the "configurable peak range" "[150-1500]"? answer: the lower limit of the range is given by the next-lower performance level's value (in this case the value of performance level 1, 150, which I set with my tool earlier) Before I modified the performance level data, it was not possible to set ram-clock below 1000, aticonfig reported "configurable range [1000-1500]" (I never set any clocks or performance level data in my BIOS)
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PGP key molecular F9B70769 fingerprint 9CDD C0D3 20F8 279F 6BE0 3F39 FC49 2362 F9B7 0769
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PcChip
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May 28, 2011, 12:28:52 AM |
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What language is your tool written in, and how exactly do you edit hardware parameters? I'm not asking because I need to use it (I run Windows, don't know shit about linux but wish I did), I'm asking because it sounds really cool
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Legacy signature from 2011: All rates with Phoenix 1.50 / PhatK 5850 - 400 MH/s | 5850 - 355 MH/s | 5830 - 310 MH/s | GTX570 - 115 MH/s | 5770 - 210 MH/s | 5770 - 200 MH/s
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Tmoney
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May 28, 2011, 01:41:52 AM |
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Can you explain what doesn't work with amdoverdrivectrl? Do you get an error message? Take a look at AMDOverdriveCtrl --help. There are two parameters of significant value: -i and -b -i takes an index for the card you want to select. In my case, the 5830 shows up as index 3. -b is for batch mode. It won't start the gui and will just set the clock speeds and exit The final parameter is an overdrive configuration file that contains all the good clock settings. You can create one in the AMDOverdriveCtrl interface and save it. AMDOverdriveCtrl -i 3 -b 5830.ovdr <?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?> <OVERDRIVE_PROFILE> <PERFORMANCE_LEVEL level="2" gpu="97500" mem="30000" voltage="1160"/> <PERFORMANCE_LEVEL level="1" gpu="55000" mem="15000" voltage="1038"/> <PERFORMANCE_LEVEL level="0" gpu="15700" mem="15000" voltage="950"/> <FAN_SETTING percentage="50"/> <FAN_CTRL enabled="no"/> <FAN_CTRL_CURVE type="0"/> <FAN_CTRL_POINT nr="0" temperature="2000" percentage="0"/> <FAN_CTRL_POINT nr="1" temperature="4000" percentage="2500"/> <FAN_CTRL_POINT nr="2" temperature="6000" percentage="5000"/> <FAN_CTRL_POINT nr="3" temperature="8000" percentage="7500"/> <FAN_CTRL_POINT nr="4" temperature="10000" percentage="10000"/> <MONITOR_SAMPLE_TIME interval="10"/> <COLOR_PROFILE enabled="no" longitude="-13.000000" latitude="52.000000" color_temp_day="0" color_temp_night="0" transition="30"/> </OVERDRIVE_PROFILE> Using the above, I have a shell script that I can execute (over ssh, because my rig is in the basement): frozen@anarix:~/poclbm$ cat 5830.sh #!/bin/bash export DISPLAY=:0 AMDOverdriveCtrl -i 3 -b 5830.ovdr ./poclbm.py -u xxxxx_desktop5830 --pass xxxxxx -o xxxxx -p 8332 -v -d 2 -f 1 Works pretty well. I have an overdrive and a script for each card that I am running. Frozen, you are a GD genius. I've been trying to figure out how to downclock my memory in linux on multiple adapters, without having to use Windows to flash the bios, or Windows at all. Your gpu.sh script is sweet too because I no longer have to arrow up and to get to whenever the last time I used aticonfig --odgc/t --adapter=all. Thanks. This is worth at least a bitcoin to me, so post an address to donate with the bitcoind command. T
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molecular
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May 28, 2011, 09:02:28 AM |
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Your gpu.sh script is sweet too because I no longer have to arrow up and to get to whenever the last time I used aticonfig --odgc/t --adapter=all. Thanks. This is worth at least a bitcoin to me, so post an address to donate with the bitcoind command.
you know you can just do #> echo "aticonfig --odgc/t --adapter=all" >> myscript.sh #> chmod a+x myscript.sh
magic yourself, don't you?
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PGP key molecular F9B70769 fingerprint 9CDD C0D3 20F8 279F 6BE0 3F39 FC49 2362 F9B7 0769
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