On 09/05/18 14:33, Stuart Henderson wrote:
On 2018/09/05 13:56, Martijn Rijkeboer wrote:
On 09/05/18 12:29, Stuart Henderson wrote:
On 2018/09/05 11:54, Martijn Rijkeboer wrote:
Hi,

I've installed OpenBSD-current (dmesg below) on my new Lenovo Thinkpad T480
and noticed the following error during startup:

error: [drm:pid0:i915_firmware_load_error_print] *ERROR* failed to load
firmware i915/kbl_dmc_ver1.bin (-22)

That's normal as inteldrm firmware is not enabled - it's not linked to
the build in ports/sysutils/firmware so firmware packages aren't built,
and it hasn't been added to fw_update so even if they were built, they
wouldn't be installed.

Clear.


error: [drm:pid0:intel_dp_link_training_clock_recovery] *ERROR* too many
full retries, give up

I think those are probably "normal" too, at least they're very common.

error: [drm:pid62957:intel_dp_link_training_clock_recovery] *ERROR* failed to 
enable link training
error: [drm:pid62957:intel_dp_link_training_channel_equalization] *ERROR* 
failed to start channel equalization
error: [drm:pid90813:ivybridge_set_fifo_underrun_reporting] *ERROR* uncleared 
fifo underrun on pipe B
error: [drm:pid90813:intel_cpu_fifo_underrun_irq_handler] *ERROR* CPU pipe B 
FIFO underrun

Clear.


This results in very slow X11 performance. Any suggestions how to fix this?

It doesn't follow that "this results in" ..

What software is having problems? For Firefox I'm using this wrapper script
(env variables as mentioned in the pkg-readme):

$ cat bin/firefox
#!/bin/sh
exec /usr/bin/env MOZ_ACCELERATED=1 MOZ_WEBRENDER=1 /usr/local/bin/firefox

All software is running slow, even mounting the partitions and starting
the system services during startup. As mentioned in my reply to Solène
Rapenne this only happens on a cold boot. After a reboot everything
works fine (i.e. fast).

Please send a bug report using the template froom sendbug -P run as root
so that it includes the ACPI tables, pcidump output, etc.

Save one from a "slow" boot and one from a "fast" boot, if there's a
difference in pcidump / acpi tables / dmesg then send *both* and say which
is which.

Also "vmstat -i" from slow/fast might give a clue.

I've just sent a bug report using sendbug -P including both the "slow"
and "fast" versions (they differ). I've also included the output of
vmstat -i for both "slow" and "fast".

Kind regards,


Martijn Rijkeboer


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