A PowerEdge server running a virtualization workload shows CPU throttling under load, despite sufficient PSU capacity and no hardware faults. Which configuration is the cause of this issue?
When a Dell PowerEdge server executing heavy compute virtualization workloads displays unexpected CPU frequency throttling without associated thermal errors or hardware component degradation, the cause is generally a restrictive power management rule. Inside the System Setup BIOS configurations, the System Profile option manages energy efficiency and operational power policies across the processors. If the System Profile is explicitly configured to 'Performance per Watt', the platform activates aggressive Demand-Based Switching (DBS) and lets the processor's power capping policies downclock core frequencies to decrease overall power consumption. Under dense virtualization load conditions where resource requests fluctuate rapidly, this power-capping profile introduces unneeded clock frequency throttling, directly degrading virtual machine compute performance. To maximize frequency stability and guarantee that core frequencies match the maximum base clock speed during heavy workloads, the system profile must be adjusted to 'Performance'. This modification turns off hardware power-throttling states and ensures processing units run with minimal latency constraints.
Study Guide References: Server Monitoring; BIOS System Profiles; Power Metrics and Processor Performance Polling.
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