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Mali hw counters not matching Streamline's built-in Mali Bifrost G71 profile

Hi,

I am using Streamline 6.8.0, with gator daemon on a non-rooted Samsung Galaxy S8 Exynos. Streamline is connecting and capturing correctly, and I am trying to use the built-in Bifrost G71 profile, as I was used to do with the Midgard ones on S7.

Unfortunately, many of the pre-configured charts have a warning that they cannot find the corresponding counter. (I have tried all of the available ones).

Is it possible that counters have changed names? Is there an updated Streamline profile that I could use?

Thanks,

Lorenzo

PS: I am attaching some screenshots that show the problem:

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  • That's a great way of doing it. I did not know the $ZOOM built-in variable, that will change my game.

    On the device I have, I can find the max frequency of the GPU like this:

    dreamlte:/ $ cat /sys/devices/platform/13900000.mali/asv_table
    GPU, vol, min, max, down_stay, mif, int, cpu
    546,  662500, 78,  99, 5, 1794000, 400000, 1690000
    455,  650000, 78,  85, 9, 1540000, 400000, 1456000
    385,  643750, 78,  85, 1, 1352000, 400000, 1248000
    338,  637500, 78,  85, 1, 1014000, 267000,  949000
    260,  637500, 78,  85, 1, 421000, 178000,       0

    I guess the max frequency could be lowered by the system in certain situations like thermal throttoling, but that's probably as good as it gets.

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  • That's a great way of doing it. I did not know the $ZOOM built-in variable, that will change my game.

    On the device I have, I can find the max frequency of the GPU like this:

    dreamlte:/ $ cat /sys/devices/platform/13900000.mali/asv_table
    GPU, vol, min, max, down_stay, mif, int, cpu
    546,  662500, 78,  99, 5, 1794000, 400000, 1690000
    455,  650000, 78,  85, 9, 1540000, 400000, 1456000
    385,  643750, 78,  85, 1, 1352000, 400000, 1248000
    338,  637500, 78,  85, 1, 1014000, 267000,  949000
    260,  637500, 78,  85, 1, 421000, 178000,       0

    I guess the max frequency could be lowered by the system in certain situations like thermal throttoling, but that's probably as good as it gets.

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