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I started by trying to get my gpu temperature, which, in my case meant running:
sudo sensors-detect
this tool seemed to suggest it had found a temperature sensors in my gpu:AMD Family 17h thermal sensors... Success!
(driver `k10temp')
next, I ran:
sensors
Which gave me the following info:
nvme-pci-0900
Adapter: PCI adapter
Composite: +42.9°C (low = -273.1°C, high = +109.8°C)
(crit = +129.8°C)
Sensor 2: +62.9°C (low = -273.1°C, high = -273.1°C)
k10temp-pci-00c3
Adapter: PCI adapter
Tctl: +37.4°C
From what I saw from the sensors-detect output, I kinda assumed that k10temp-pci-00c3 would be my gpu temp. But after running furmark for a while, I got the following readings:
nvme-pci-0900
Adapter: PCI adapter
Composite: +48.9°C (low = -273.1°C, high = +109.8°C)
(crit = +129.8°C)
Sensor 2: +62.9°C (low = -273.1°C, high = -273.1°C)
k10temp-pci-00c3
Adapter: PCI adapter
Tctl: +38.2°C
And, well, 1°C after like 20 min of furmark doesn't seem right. The only temp that really went up was the one labeled: "composite". And, 48.9°C still sounds quite low. But the thing is, I looked at my gpu, and, my gpu fans aren't even spinning (they do some spinning when I boot up the computer, so I assume the fans work at least), so, it is almost like the gpu thinks it is actually not getting much hotter.
So, all of this just left me with a bunch of questions. Am I looking at the right sensors? If not, how do I get a readout for the right sensors? And if I am looking at the right sensors, why is the temperature barely going up?
It is like my gpu has some thermal cap, which makes it throttle super hard at 49 degrees without even bothering to turn on the fans. But that just seems strange. I have never even touched stuff like the fan curves and other gpu settings from linux, also, these super low framerates I have been getting seem to be a recent thing, so you'd think something must have changed.
Sensors outputs a separate section like this for my 5700 XT:
amdgpu-pci-0b00
Adapter: PCI adapter
vddgfx: 725.00 mV
fan1: 0 RPM (min = 0 RPM, max = 3200 RPM)
edge: +44.0°C (crit = +100.0°C, hyst = -273.1°C)
(emerg = +105.0°C)
junction: +44.0°C (crit = +107.0°C, hyst = -273.1°C)
(emerg = +112.0°C)
mem: +50.0°C (crit = +105.0°C, hyst = -273.1°C)
(emerg = +110.0°C)
slowPPT: 9.00 W (cap = 195.00 W)
View PC info
/sys/class/drm/card0/hwmon/hwmon0/pwm1
file to manually adjust fan speed.So.. idk if I just have a niche card, but a lot of the information on the web doesn't seem to work for me. Only thing that got me some amount of information is:
sudo lshw -c display
Which rerturns:
*-display
description: VGA compatible controller
product: Tonga XT / Amethyst XT [Radeon R9 380X / R9 M295X]
vendor: Advanced Micro Devices, Inc. [AMD/ATI]
physical id: 0
bus info: pci@0000:08:00.0
version: f1
width: 64 bits
clock: 33MHz
capabilities: pm pciexpress msi vga_controller bus_master cap
configuration: driver=amdgpu latency=0
resources: irq:69 memory:e0000000-efffffff memory:f0000000-f0
which doesn't really tell me more, except that something is running at 33MHz?? I doubt that is the actual gpu clockspeed, cause it doesn't go up with load at all, and... with a speed that low... would it even be able to run my desktop smoothly?
At this point I'd almost think it is running on cpu graphics. But I am running an R7 1700, which doesn't have an onboard gpu, so that isn't possible.
View PC info
glxinfo|grep OpenGL
and
sudo lshw -c video|grep driver
say?
33MHz is something else, so don't worry. (33MHz is probably the PCIe bus clock speed during idle)
Last edited by tuxintuxedo on 24 April 2022 at 4:35 pm UTC
glxinfo|grep OpenGL
OpenGL vendor string: AMD
OpenGL renderer string: AMD Radeon R9 380 Series (tonga, LLVM 13.0.1, DRM 3.42, 5.15.35-1-lts)
OpenGL core profile version string: 4.6 (Core Profile) Mesa 22.0.1
OpenGL core profile shading language version string: 4.60
OpenGL core profile context flags: (none)
OpenGL core profile profile mask: core profile
OpenGL core profile extensions:
OpenGL version string: 4.6 (Compatibility Profile) Mesa 22.0.1
OpenGL shading language version string: 4.60
OpenGL context flags: (none)
OpenGL profile mask: compatibility profile
OpenGL extensions:
OpenGL ES profile version string: OpenGL ES 3.2 Mesa 22.0.1
OpenGL ES profile shading language version string: OpenGL ES GLSL ES 3.20
OpenGL ES profile extensions:
sudo lshw -c video|grep driver
configuration: driver=amdgpu latency=0
View PC info