Updated FAQ (markdown)
parent
f3aad12717
commit
263463a25a
1 changed files with 10 additions and 5 deletions
15
FAQ.md
15
FAQ.md
|
@ -5,9 +5,8 @@ PowerTools does not save any data by default; it reads and writes to the SteamOS
|
|||
Since no data is saved, a reboot will reset all PowerTools settings back to default.
|
||||
|
||||
## Why does PowerTools only let me select some values?
|
||||
There's a few reasons for this, depending on the values in question:
|
||||
- GPU PPT Wattage: The rest of the values can already be set from SteamOS's Performance settings in the QAM
|
||||
- Others: logical limits coming from the [specs of the Steam Deck](https://www.steamdeck.com/en/tech)
|
||||
There's a few reasons for this, depending on the values in question, but it all stems from limits imposed by (or to protect) the hardware.
|
||||
Most limits can be justified by the [specs of the Steam Deck](https://www.steamdeck.com/en/tech) or the allowed values for a specific kernel API.
|
||||
|
||||
## How do I reset to default settings?
|
||||
Restart your Steam Deck. Nothing in PowerTools is persistent, unless you enable persistence (in which case: turn off the toggle, *then* restart your Deck).
|
||||
|
@ -16,13 +15,19 @@ Restart your Steam Deck. Nothing in PowerTools is persistent, unless you enable
|
|||
I don't know, ask Valve. Most of the defaults are pretty logical, so none of them should be too objectionable.
|
||||
|
||||
## What does disabling SMT do?
|
||||
The SMT toggle in PowerTools doesn't actually disable SMT. Instead it disables every second CPU, since every group of two CPUs is one logical CPU core.
|
||||
The SMT toggle in PowerTools doesn't technically disable SMT.
|
||||
Instead it disables every second CPU, since every group of two CPUs is one logical CPU core.
|
||||
|
||||
## Why does disabling SMT speed up some games?
|
||||
I don't really know.
|
||||
My theory, which is backed by exactly zero research and experiments, is that since SMT increases performance of a single core by less than 100% (usually it's closer to 30-50%), that 150% performance gets split between two threads, effectively reducing each thread's performance to 75% when both threads are under heavy load.
|
||||
It would then follow that disabling one of those threads would restore the remaining thread to 100% performance.
|
||||
|
||||
# TLA (Three Letter Acronyms)
|
||||
## AMD
|
||||
Advanced Micro Devices: the company that makes the processor in the Steam Deck
|
||||
## APU
|
||||
"Accelerated" Processing Unit: the marketing term for a CPU with an integrated GPU
|
||||
"Accelerated" Processing Unit: the marketing term used by AMD for a CPU with an integrated GPU
|
||||
## CPU
|
||||
Central Processing Unit: the main processor, the Steam Deck uses one with Zen2 architecture
|
||||
## GPU
|
||||
|
|
Loading…
Reference in a new issue