You could add some details on the actual hardware in use. _________________________ Ideas/speculation: If you are on Intel 13th or 14th gen, check your BIOS version. It's vital to run the latest one. The error might be related to the CPU but could also be memory-based. Depending on how many times your mainboard enforces a re-training of the modules, the (possible) error could shift somewhat. Are you running overclocked RAM? Try if using default settings alters the results. Tests: Prime 95 "Blend" usually is able to quickly show problems with the memory setup, including the CPU's memory controller and the actual RAM sticks. It then fails on single cores or triggers a kernel panic. You can also check things even more low-level with memtest86+ , running outside of the OS. It's likely that you can run it from the advanced options in Grub. Otherwise a USB bootable medium will help. Answer from 28874559260134F on reddit.com
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GitHub
github.com › ilya-zlobintsev › LACT › wiki › Overclocking-(AMD)
Overclocking (AMD) · ilya-zlobintsev/LACT Wiki
Enabling overdrive requires the ppfeaturemask option to be set in the amdgpu driver. There are 2 way to do it: For mainstream Linux distributions, you can use the "Enable Overclocking" button in the OC page of the LACT UI.
Author   ilya-zlobintsev
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Garuda Linux
forum.garudalinux.org › issues & assistance › unsupported software (aur & other)
When i Boot I get this Error /// amdgpu overdrive is enabled please disable it How? - Unsupported Software (AUR & Other) - Garuda Linux Forum
November 21, 2025 - when i Boot I get this Error /// amdgpu overdrive is enabled please disable it I Just want to Disable it i have changed the kernel to Kernel Linux 6.17.8-hardened2-1-hardened System: Kernel: 6.17.8-hardened2-1-hard…
Discussions

While booting garuda grub lists: amdgpu: Overdrive is enabled, please disable it before reporting any bugs unrelated to overdrive
System: Kernel: 6.17.8-zen1-1-zen arch: x86_64 bits: 64 compiler: gcc v: 15.2.1 clocksource: tsc avail: hpet,acpi_pm parameters: BOOT_IMAGE=/@/boot/vmlinuz-linux-zen root=UUID=c996762e-0e15-4e0e-9f70-8d287ebe87ef rw root… More on forum.garudalinux.org
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2
0
November 28, 2025
Amdgpu issue with linux-cachyos kernel 6.12.x [SOLVED: NOT AN ISSUE]
Hello, first of all I wanted to thank Cachyos team for OS, you guys are great thanks for your work! I noticed in a game that my GPU (Gigabyte AMD Radeon RX 7900 XT) suddenly reduced FPS after some time. This surprised me and I activated GPU core clock stats in mangohud. More on discuss.cachyos.org
🌐 discuss.cachyos.org
4
0
December 1, 2024
How to overclock your AMD GPU on Linux
Cool post. All of the stuff described here gets super simple with https://github.com/sibradzic/amdgpu-clocks , and easily applies to multiple GPUs. More on reddit.com
🌐 r/Amd
35
141
January 20, 2019
FYI for AMD Card owners, the linux kernel is setting the wrong clocks!
Yes im one of authors of this github issue,ive been working really hard to get this resolved ans if you guys can post on the ticket to get this resolved faster that would be great. More on reddit.com
🌐 r/linux_gaming
89
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July 9, 2024
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Reddit
reddit.com › r/linuxquestions › what does this error mean?
r/linuxquestions on Reddit: What does this error mean?
June 4, 2025 -

What happened before the error:

I've been trying to diagnose a restart issue that only happens when playing Skyrim (modded).

Restarts happened before, but this is the first time i saw this error upon booting:

❯ journalctl -p 3 -b
lip 04 04:55:02 cachyos kernel: [Hardware Error]: System Fatal error.
lip 04 04:55:02 cachyos kernel: [Hardware Error]: CPU:14 (19:21:2) MC5_STATUS[-|UE|MiscV|AddrV|PCC|TCC|SyndV|-|-|-]: 0xbea0000001000108
lip 04 04:55:02 cachyos kernel: [Hardware Error]: Error Addr: 0x00006ffffaf0ffd7
lip 04 04:55:02 cachyos kernel: [Hardware Error]: IPID: 0x000500b000000000, Syndrome: 0x000000004d000000
lip 04 04:55:02 cachyos kernel: [Hardware Error]: Execution Unit Ext. Error Code: 0
lip 04 04:55:02 cachyos kernel: [Hardware Error]: cache level: RESV, tx: GEN, mem-tx: GEN
lip 04 04:55:02 cachyos kernel: amdgpu: Overdrive is enabled, please disable it before reporting any bugs unrelated to overdrive.
lip 04 04:55:03 cachyos kernel: Bluetooth: hci0: No support for _PRR ACPI method

The only thing different now and before is that i have a new CPU. And it only happened after the restart, those errors. I rebooted again myself, and there was no error anymore.

Wat does this mean?

For reference, this is the boot before (the one that forced a restart):

❯ journalctl -p 3 -b -1
lip 04 02:36:48 cachyos kernel: amdgpu: Overdrive is enabled, please disable it before reporting any bugs unrelated to overdrive.
lip 04 02:36:48 cachyos kernel: Bluetooth: hci0: No support for _PRR ACPI method
lip 04 02:36:48 cachyos kernel: Bluetooth: hci0: FW download error recovery failed (-19)
lip 04 02:36:48 cachyos kernel: Bluetooth: hci0: sending frame failed (-19)
lip 04 02:36:48 cachyos kernel: Bluetooth: hci0: Failed to read MSFT supported features (-19)
lip 04 02:36:49 cachyos kernel: Bluetooth: hci0: No support for _PRR ACPI method
lip 04 02:39:17 cachyos plasmashell[1247]: qt.network.http2.connection: [0x7075f404e5f0] Connection error: HPACK decompression failed (9)
lip 04 02:48:03 cachyos kernel: playstation 0005:054C:0CE6.000E: DualSense input CRC's check failed
lip 04 02:59:11 cachyos kernel: playstation 0005:054C:0CE6.000E: DualSense input CRC's check failed
lip 04 03:01:59 cachyos kernel: playstation 0005:054C:0CE6.000E: DualSense input CRC's check failed
lip 04 03:03:31 cachyos kernel: playstation 0005:054C:0CE6.000E: DualSense input CRC's check failed
lip 04 03:06:16 cachyos kernel: playstation 0005:054C:0CE6.000E: DualSense input CRC's check failed
lip 04 03:08:25 cachyos kernel: playstation 0005:054C:0CE6.000E: DualSense input CRC's check failed
lip 04 03:08:33 cachyos kernel: playstation 0005:054C:0CE6.000E: DualSense input CRC's check failed
lip 04 03:08:59 cachyos kernel: playstation 0005:054C:0CE6.000E: DualSense input CRC's check failed
lip 04 03:21:29 cachyos kernel: playstation 0005:054C:0CE6.000E: DualSense input CRC's check failed
lip 04 04:29:38 cachyos systemd-coredump[25951]: [🡕] Process 25946 (sed) of user 1000 dumped core.

                                                 Stack trace of thread 25946:
                                                 #0  0x000070009ca00d2b n/a (/usr/lib/ld-linux-x86-64.so.2 + 0x26d2b)
                                                 #1  0x000070009c9fae23 n/a (/usr/lib/ld-linux-x86-64.so.2 + 0x20e23)
                                                 #2  0x000070009c9fc6d2 n/a (/usr/lib/ld-linux-x86-64.so.2 + 0x226d2)
                                                 #3  0x000070009c9fb488 n/a (/usr/lib/ld-linux-x86-64.so.2 + 0x21488)
                                                 ELF object binary architecture: AMD x86-64

inxi -b:

System:
 Host: cachyos Kernel: 6.15.0-2-cachyos arch: x86_64 bits: 64
 Desktop: KDE Plasma v: 6.3.5 Distro: CachyOS
Machine:
 Type: Desktop Mobo: ASRock model: B550M Pro4 serial: <superuser required>
   UEFI: American Megatrends LLC. v: P3.40 date: 01/18/2024
CPU:
 Info: 8-core AMD Ryzen 7 5700X3D [MT MCP] speed (MHz): avg: 3592
   min/max: 575/4151
Graphics:
 Device-1: Advanced Micro Devices [AMD/ATI] Navi 32 [Radeon RX 7700 XT /
   7800 XT] driver: amdgpu v: kernel
 Display: wayland server: X.org v: 1.21.1.16 with: Xwayland v: 24.1.6
   compositor: kwin_wayland driver: gpu: amdgpu resolution: 1: 2560x1440~75Hz
   2: 2560x1440~75Hz
 API: OpenGL v: 4.6 compat-v: 4.5 vendor: amd mesa v: 25.1.1-cachyos1.3
   renderer: AMD Radeon RX 7800 XT (radeonsi navi32 LLVM 19.1.7 DRM 3.63
   6.15.0-2-cachyos)
 Info: Tools: api: clinfo, eglinfo, glxinfo, vulkaninfo
   de: kscreen-console,kscreen-doctor gpu: lact wl: wayland-info
   x11: xdpyinfo, xprop, xrandr
Network:
 Device-1: Realtek RTL8111/8168/8211/8411 PCI Express Gigabit Ethernet
   driver: r8169
 Device-2: Intel Wi-Fi 6E AX210/AX1675 2x2 [Typhoon Peak] driver: iwlwifi
 Device-3: ASUSTek TUF GAMING M4 WIRELESS driver: hid-generic,usbhid
   type: USB
Drives:
 Local Storage: total: 2.96 TiB used: 769.19 GiB (25.4%)
Info:
 Memory: total: 32 GiB available: 31.26 GiB used: 5.07 GiB (16.2%)
 Processes: 414 Uptime: 1h 5m Shell: fish inxi: 3.3.38
Top answer
1 of 4
3
You could add some details on the actual hardware in use. _________________________ Ideas/speculation: If you are on Intel 13th or 14th gen, check your BIOS version. It's vital to run the latest one. The error might be related to the CPU but could also be memory-based. Depending on how many times your mainboard enforces a re-training of the modules, the (possible) error could shift somewhat. Are you running overclocked RAM? Try if using default settings alters the results. Tests: Prime 95 "Blend" usually is able to quickly show problems with the memory setup, including the CPU's memory controller and the actual RAM sticks. It then fails on single cores or triggers a kernel panic. You can also check things even more low-level with memtest86+ , running outside of the OS. It's likely that you can run it from the advanced options in Grub. Otherwise a USB bootable medium will help.
2 of 4
2
This is a hardware error in the cpu. My first guess would be overclock related. When I first bought my desktop, the default board settings had an option to dynamically set voltage based in needs. I don't know why, but that caused daily random BSODs when the load suddenly changes up or down (it was running Windows). So, you're saying it's a new cpu, I'm assuming this, or overheating from prime95. Monitor temperatures. Try some stress tests and see how it reacts. Stress tests were useless for me, as the pc never crashed on them, probably their load is predictable or something. Check your board's overclock settings and play with them. Switch between manual and automatic, if such stuff exist. Disable and enable.
🌐
Garuda Linux
forum.garudalinux.org › issues & assistance
While booting garuda grub lists: amdgpu: Overdrive is enabled, please disable it before reporting any bugs unrelated to overdrive - #3 by nepti - Issues & Assistance - Garuda Linux Forum
November 28, 2025 - System: Kernel: 6.17.8-zen1-1-zen arch: x86_64 bits: 64 compiler: gcc v: 15.2.1 clocksource: tsc avail: hpet,acpi_pm parameters: BOOT_IMAGE=/@/boot/vmlinuz-linux-zen root=UUID=c996762e-0e15-4e0e-9f70-8d287ebe87ef rw root…
🌐
GitHub
github.com › sibradzic › amdgpu-clocks
GitHub - sibradzic/amdgpu-clocks: Simple script to control power states of amdgpu driven GPUs · GitHub
The OverDrive is not enabled by default as of Linux 5.x, it can be enabled by setting 14th bit (0x4000) of a ppfeaturemask amdgpu driver to 1. For example, setting amdgpu.ppfeaturemask=0xfffd7fff or amdgpu.ppfeaturemask=0xffffffff kernel boot ...
Starred by 463 users
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Phoronix
phoronix.com › news › Linux-4.20-Increase-AMD-GPU-TDP
Linux 4.20 Allows Overclockers To Increase The Radeon TDP Power Limit - Phoronix
This change wasn't prominently advertised but fortunately a Phoronix reader happened to run across it today and tipped us off. Increasing the GPU TDP power limit first requires enabling AMD OverDrive on Linux, which is done via the amdgpu.ppfeaturemask=0xffffffff kernel boot parameter when starting the system.
🌐
Lightwo
blog.lightwo.net › undervolting-underclocking-amd-gpu-linux.html
Undervolting/underclocking AMD GPU (Linux) - lightwo's Blog
OVERDRIVE (0x4000) must be enabled to apply any clock/voltage values. Bonus: Consider disabling these aggressive power-saving features if you run into other GPU-related issues (ArchWiki/AMDGPU specifically goes over this):
🌐
Arch Linux Forums
bbs.archlinux.org › viewtopic.php
Trouble getting the expected performance out of an AMD GPU / Kernel & Hardware / Arch Linux Forums
July 4, 2025 - [ +0.000000] Command line: BOOT_IMAGE=/vmlinuz-linux-zen root=UUID=a2e22b4d-7352-445f-b6ad-74605e3088db rw rootfstype=btrfs verbose loglevel=3 verbose amdgpu.ppfeaturemask=0xfff7ffff drm.edid_firmware=DP-2:edid/AOC_Q24G2_CVT-RB-OVERRIDE.bin [ +0.000000] Kernel command line: BOOT_IMAGE=/vmlinuz-linux-zen root=UUID=a2e22b4d-7352-445f-b6ad-74605e3088db rw rootfstype=btrfs verbose loglevel=3 verbose amdgpu.ppfeaturemask=0xfff7ffff drm.edid_firmware=DP-2:edid/AOC_Q24G2_CVT-RB-OVERRIDE.bin [ +0.009015] [drm] amdgpu kernel modesetting enabled. [ +0.000189] amdgpu: Virtual CRAT table created for CPU [ +0.000171] amdgpu: Topology: Add CPU node [ +0.000091] amdgpu: Overdrive is enabled, please disable it before reporting any bugs unrelated to overdrive.
Find elsewhere
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GitHub
github.com › matszpk › amdcovc
GitHub - matszpk/amdcovc: Utility to overclock AMD Radeon GPU's in console mode (linux) · GitHub
This is program to control AMD Overdrive settings that is working if graphics cards are in console-mode. This program has been written to replace amdconfig utility and allow to overclock Radeon GPU's if no running X11 server. An amdconfig utility requires a running X11 server and X11 kept configuration to be working correctly. Thus, this program ease overclocking of Radeon GPU's under console environment (in SSH or Linux console).
Starred by 196 users
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Languages   C++ 99.3% | Makefile 0.7%
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Wccftech
wccftech.com › home › hardware › amd to enhance “overdrive” gpu overclocking features for linux users
AMD To Enhance "OverDrive" GPU Overclocking Features For Linux Users
September 2, 2023 - AMD developers are working on revamping the "OverDrive" feature on Linux, allowing additional GPU overclocking capabilities on Linux.
🌐
ArchWiki
wiki.archlinux.org › title › AMDGPU
AMDGPU - ArchWiki
May 28, 2026 - It is required to unlock access to adjust clocks and voltages in sysfs by appending the Kernel parameter amdgpu.ppfeaturemask=0xffffffff. Not all bits are defined, and new features may be added over time. Setting all 32 bits may enable unstable features that cause problems such as screen flicker or broken resume from suspend. It should be sufficient to set the PP_OVERDRIVE...
🌐
CachyOS Forum
discuss.cachyos.org › issues & assistance
Amdgpu issue with linux-cachyos kernel 6.12.x [SOLVED: NOT AN ISSUE] - Issues & Assistance - CachyOS Forum
December 1, 2024 - Hello, first of all I wanted to thank Cachyos team for OS, you guys are great thanks for your work! I noticed in a game that my GPU (Gigabyte AMD Radeon RX 7900 XT) suddenly reduced FPS after some time. This surprised me and I activated GPU core clock stats in mangohud.
🌐
GitHub
gist.github.com › danielrosehill › 6a531b079906f160911a87dea50e1507
A Dummy's Guide to AMD GPU Issues on Linux - Understanding RDNA3, TLB Fences, and Kernel Parameters · GitHub
Overdrive: AMD's term for overclocking features. When people say "overdrive enabled," it usually just means the GPU can boost its clocks. AMDGPU: The open-source Linux kernel driver for modern AMD GPUs
🌐
Arch Linux Forums
bbs.archlinux.org › viewtopic.php
[SOLVED] AMDGPU reset when playing games / Newbie Corner / Arch Linux Forums
I notice a strange thing that in lact,the overclock is strangely on[didn't turn it on manually] when i try to disable overclocking support in lact it says · 2024-12-27T13:28:21.097121Z WARN lact_gui::app: Got error from daemon, end of client boundary Caused by: Overclocking was not enabled through LACT (file at /etc/modprobe.d/99-amdgpu-overdrive...
🌐
Reddit
reddit.com › r/amd › how to overclock your amd gpu on linux
r/Amd on Reddit: How to overclock your AMD GPU on Linux
January 20, 2019 -

One thing I missed from Windows after my transition to Linux was the ability to easily adjust my GPU's clock speeds and voltages. I went to the godly Arch Wiki and found there's a way to overclock AMD GPUs, but some steps are not very clear and I had to do some googling to get everything working.

EDIT: Vega GPU are not supported as of kernel 4.20.2! Here's a workaround by u/whatsaspecialusername.

First things first, your kernel has to be at least version 4.17 (you can check by running uname -a), although it's recommended to update it to the latest version for system stability, bug fixes and new features (for instance, Hawaii support for overclocking was introduced in 4.20). The driver should be amdgpu (not the proprietary amdgpu-pro). I suggest installing the latest mesa+amdgpu from this PPA for *buntu, but I don't know about other distros. It might not even be a necessary step.

You need to add the parameter amdgpu.ppfeaturemask=0xffffffff to your GRUB configuration. To do so, edit /etc/default/grub as root and add the parameter between the quotes of GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX_DEFAULT. Save, then run sudo update-grub2 or sudo grub-mkconfig -o /boot/grub/grub.cfg, depending on your distro. Reboot. If you're running any bootloader other than GRUB, check this Arch Wiki page.

Now, we need to find the file with our GPU's clocks and voltages. In my case it was in /sys/devices/pci0000:00/0000:00:01.0/0000:01:00.0/, but you can find the directory by running readlink -f /sys/class/drm/card0/device.

The file we want to work with is called pp_od_clk_voltage. Mine looked like the following (my card is a Sapphire RX 580 Nitro+ 4GB):

OD_SCLK:
0:        300MHz        750mV
1:        600MHz        769mV
2:        900MHz        887mV
3:       1145MHz       1100mV
4:       1215MHz       1181mV
5:       1257MHz       1150mV
6:       1300MHz       1150mV
7:       1411MHz       1150mV
OD_MCLK:
0:        300MHz        750mV
1:       1000MHz        800mV
2:       1750MHz        950mV
OD_RANGE:
SCLK:     300MHz       2000MHz
MCLK:     300MHz       2250MHz
VDDC:     750mV        1200mV

We want to edit the P-state #7 for the core and #2 for the VRAM, as those are the values that our GPU is going to run at while under load. On Windows, my optimal values were 1450MHz for core and 2065MHz for memory, so I'm going to edit the file as follows:

sudo sh -c "echo 's 7 1450 1150' > /sys/devices/pci0000:00/0000:00:01.0/0000:01:00.0/pp_od_clk_voltage"

Where "s" means we're editing the core's values, 7 is the seventh P-state, 1450 is the speed we want in MHz, 1150 is the voltage in mV. Note that I didn't run sudo echo "s 7 1450 1150" > /sys/class/drm/card0/device/pp_od_clk_voltage like the Arch Wiki states, because it would throw an error and not apply the changes (this might have worked without "sudo" if we logged in as root with sudo su, but it's best not to do so for safety reasons). See here.

Same with the VRAM: sudo sh -c "echo 'm 2 2065 950' > /sys/devices/pci0000:00/0000:00:01.0/0000:01:00.0/pp_od_clk_voltage"

After these two commands the file is going to be the same except for the two lines of the P-states we just edited. We can check by running cat /sys/devices/pci0000:00/0000:00:01.0/0000:01:00.0/pp_od_clk_voltage.

I didn't mess with voltages because I'm already satisfied with my results and I'm very paranoid about damaging my GPU. If you really want to, please be really careful as you might cause fatal damage to your card!

Once we are done, running sudo sh -c "echo 'c' > /sys/devices/pci0000:00/0000:00:01.0/0000:01:00.0/pp_od_clk_voltage" will apply the changes and the GPU will start running at those new frequencies when under load.

While I haven't found a way to actively monitor clock speeds à la MSI Afterburner (EDIT: there is actually! See this comment by u/AlienOverlordXenu), I could see a sudden increase in FPS in Heaven Benchmark as soon as I applied the new clocks. I set the camera to free mode (so that it stops moving) and after applying the FPS went from 55-56 to 60-61!

(The guide on ArchWiki also has a command to change the maximum power consumption in Watts: I didn't mess with it as I wasn't sure what was a safe value)

Now there's one problem: every time we reboot our PC the clocks are going to reset. So how do we make them stick?

Assuming your distro has systemd, we can create a service that runs the three commands that edit and apply the clocks at boot. If your distro doesn't have systemd, you can follow these steps.

First, we need to create a script. I named mine "overclock" and put it in /usr/bin/. It looks like this:

#!/bin/sh
sudo sh -c "echo 's 7 1450 1150' > /sys/devices/pci0000:00/0000:00:01.0/0000:01:00.0/pp_od_clk_voltage"
sudo sh -c "echo 'm 2 2065 950' > /sys/devices/pci0000:00/0000:00:01.0/0000:01:00.0/pp_od_clk_voltage"
sudo sh -c "echo 'c' > /sys/devices/pci0000:00/0000:00:01.0/0000:01:00.0/pp_od_clk_voltage"

Then, we have to create a file in /etc/systemd/system/ with a .service extension. I named mine overclock.service:

[Unit]
Description=Increase GPU core and memory clocks

[Service]
Type=oneshot
ExecStart=/usr/bin/overclock

[Install]
WantedBy=multi-user.target

sudo systemctl enable overclock.service will enable our service. After rebooting it should automatically overclock the GPU. We can check if it did by running cat /sys/devices/pci0000:00/0000:00:01.0/0000:01:00.0/pp_od_clk_voltage.

(It's not necessary, but I also made a script that sets the GPU back to the stock clock speeds. I didn't make a service for it, I just put it in my Documents folder.)

So that should be it! Keep in mind that it might not work on any AMD GPU, in fact I couldn't find a way to do it on my Ryzen+Vega laptop (something with power saving mode I'm guessing), but it's always worth a try. This is my first "real" guide so any feedback is very much appreciated.