Comment by fulafel
11 hours ago
For others unfamiliar with Windows, according to https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/windows-server/administrat... "High Performance" entails:
> Processors are always locked at the highest performance state (including "turbo" frequencies). All cores are unparked. Thermal output may be significant.
This isn’t specific to windows. This is also basically the same terminology Linux uses.
There's no mode spelled the same ("High Performance") - and I don't think Linuxes universally do this:
> Processors are always locked at the highest performance state (including "turbo" frequencies).
Unless performance state means something idiosyncratic in MS terminology.
Normally you'd want to let idle apply power saving measures including downclocking to donate some unused power envelope to busy cores, increasing overall performance.
But this varies across various Linux based platforms. For example on RHEL (https://docs.redhat.com/en/documentation/red_hat_enterprise_...):
"throughput-performance:
accelerator-performance:
latency-performance:
Here the latency-performance profile sounds most like the Windows Server mode (but differnet from throughput-performance).