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You have various choices depending on the distribution you use according to the official auto-cpufreq repository. You can install The repository also lists instructions for installation, and the rest depends on how you installed it. You can create an Ubuntu container, use the Snap or an Arch container, and install it from the AUR or a container of another distribution (they mention openSUSE, Red HAT, Solus, and Void) and run their installer. In any case, I guess you want to start If you're using a container to run If you do want to start it as a service and you used a container, we can explore that. A fourth option is to add the binary to the root of Nitrux and use the already available service script for OpenRC that its developer provides. You have to disable the immutability to do this. However, the distribution only includes some Python packages listed in the requirements on the repository. In that case, you can create an issue asking for a feature request to add the other Python packages. Or you can download the Debian packages, extract them and copy the contents to the root directory. As before, you have to disable the immutability to do this. And a fifth option is not to use |
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I wanted to install the auto cpufreq tool, that's a cpu governer. I can't find a way to install it through distrobox on the host system as it uses systemd( in this case openrc) to start at boot up. Can you pls guide me through how to install it. Project link(https://github.com/AdnanHodzic/auto-cpufreq). Any help would be appreciated as auto-cpufreq combined with tlp gives me great battery life.
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