- Jun 6, 2013
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Due to the reasons stated in this Thread about my obsession with VT-d support, I'm seriously considering purchasing a proper, Workstation-class Supermicro X10SAT Motherboard with the C226 Chipset, to be paired with a Xeon E3-1200 V3 series. Such type of Motherboards usually comes with ZERO options in the BIOS to allow you to run out-of-spec, and that effectively means no chance to change in the BIOS the Multiplier or Voltage, effectively forcing me to run everything at default settings.
Yes, I know that the Xeon doesn't come with a fully Locked Multiplier and bla bla bla. However, at the very least, I would want:
1 - Manual Multiplier control: Mostly for manual underclock. Besides, it should still be possible to raise the Multiplier to the maximum that Turbo uses. On a Xeon E3-1245 V3, that means that I could leave Frequency fixed at 3.8 GHz, instead of 3.4 GHz with Turbo kicking in depending on load, for more consistency.
2 - Manual Voltage control: Because if I can't go above certain Frequency, I would want to be able to go for the lowest possible Voltage than that Frequency can be rock solid at, for the best possible power efficiency. And considering that I shouldn't be able to go more than 400 MHz above nominal Frequency, I should have some interesing headroom to reduce Voltage, and thus power consumption, and also Fan speed. This would also allow me to go for below-default values for Idle. Indeed, for power efficiency, undervolting is a must.
On some previous generations, there were tools that allowed you control of many values from Windows. At least on AMD, I used, and still use, Central Brain Identifier and K10Stat for both things on an A64 and my current AIIX4. So far, I don't know if on Intel side there are tools for that. At least, when I tried to undervolt a Mobile Sandy Bridge from a Notebook I purchased some months ago, I heared that there were no Windows tools to do that, and obviously Notebooks BIOSes doesn't gives you these options, neither many Workstation Motherboards BIOSes does.
In order to use such a Motherboard and still be able to tweak it to my tastes, I need to have control of those two things. Is there any Software based tool for Haswell to do this? Or I NEED to do in from BIOS?
Yes, I know that the Xeon doesn't come with a fully Locked Multiplier and bla bla bla. However, at the very least, I would want:
1 - Manual Multiplier control: Mostly for manual underclock. Besides, it should still be possible to raise the Multiplier to the maximum that Turbo uses. On a Xeon E3-1245 V3, that means that I could leave Frequency fixed at 3.8 GHz, instead of 3.4 GHz with Turbo kicking in depending on load, for more consistency.
2 - Manual Voltage control: Because if I can't go above certain Frequency, I would want to be able to go for the lowest possible Voltage than that Frequency can be rock solid at, for the best possible power efficiency. And considering that I shouldn't be able to go more than 400 MHz above nominal Frequency, I should have some interesing headroom to reduce Voltage, and thus power consumption, and also Fan speed. This would also allow me to go for below-default values for Idle. Indeed, for power efficiency, undervolting is a must.
On some previous generations, there were tools that allowed you control of many values from Windows. At least on AMD, I used, and still use, Central Brain Identifier and K10Stat for both things on an A64 and my current AIIX4. So far, I don't know if on Intel side there are tools for that. At least, when I tried to undervolt a Mobile Sandy Bridge from a Notebook I purchased some months ago, I heared that there were no Windows tools to do that, and obviously Notebooks BIOSes doesn't gives you these options, neither many Workstation Motherboards BIOSes does.
In order to use such a Motherboard and still be able to tweak it to my tastes, I need to have control of those two things. Is there any Software based tool for Haswell to do this? Or I NEED to do in from BIOS?