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294 points AgaoAnar | 4 comments | | HN request time: 0.218s | source
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2OEH8eoCRo0 ◴[] No.45108785[source]
Have you measured the power consumption of your "high power consumption" server?
replies(3): >>45109039 #>>45109962 #>>45110348 #
jeffbee ◴[] No.45109039[source]
Seriously. You can get running states around 1W these days.
replies(3): >>45109835 #>>45110165 #>>45110346 #
wiredpancake ◴[] No.45110165[source]
Running states around 1W? How?
replies(3): >>45110210 #>>45110528 #>>45111323 #
1. jeffbee ◴[] No.45110528[source]
Only put the RAM you need in the box, use peripherals with working ASPM, attach them to the northbridge PCI ports instead of the CPU's root ports, use wireless instead of wired networking, and don't attach a display.
replies(1): >>45110781 #
2. wiredpancake ◴[] No.45110781[source]
I do basically all of that, CPU idles around 5% but still consumes over 100W. (Minus the Wireless part)

(5800X + 64GB)

I can enable Eco Mode in the BIOS, which will bring down the CPU to about 65W max although its still at about 100W total system.

replies(2): >>45110815 #>>45111342 #
3. jeffbee ◴[] No.45110815[source]
Whatever software you are using is totally, utterly broken. Not sure what else I can tell you. Even a completely decked out Ryzen AI Max Pro 395 idles at 5W in Windows S0 (see: https://h20195.www2.hp.com/v2/getpdf.aspx/c09133726.pdf)
4. supertrope ◴[] No.45111342[source]
Chiplet based Ryzen CPUs inherently have higher idle power draw. Monolithic chips like 5600G have lower idle power draw. The motherboard, power supply, and internal peripherals all need to be carefully selected to get a really low idle figure.