Better Battery Stats: gsiff_daemon ? - Galaxy S III Q&A, (US Carriers)

I don't have any complaints about battery life, but I'm curious about the process that is apparently taking the most CPU time on my phone. Under the process tab, gsiff_daemon is almost always the top listing. It's a part of "Android System", and took seven times the CPU time as the next process. It's about evenly user/system time. Does anyone have any idea as to what this is? Is it similar to kworker on the SGS II?

I had the same problem with gsif_daemon on my S3 (SGH-I747), it was causing "Android System" to use over 50% of a battery charge.
I rebooted the phone and have not seen it since. Now my top battery uses are Cell standby and Screen, with Android System staying 9% or lower.

Related

ATT version of SG2 sucks your battery?! *Fixed*

Update and FIX!
My phone is no longer draining massive amount of batt life when idle (3-5% after 7 hours of idle), android system usage is now down to 5-15% instead of 78-97% from before.
My fixes.
1. Turn off data syncing
2. Turn off wifi while on the road (so wifi doesn't constantly look for signals).
3. Clear memory
Yes, att installs a lot of bloatware that constantly update for changes.
If killing those services AND disabling data syncing doesn't help your problem, then you have a kernel problem (like myself).
If this is the case, do the following:
1. Take phone back to att and get a replacement
OR
2. Re-flash your android with the STOCK kernel found here
http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=1286432
OR
3. Reflash with cognition x2 (reported to solve a member's problem, I didn't try this myself).
NOTE** This will root your phone, you will NOT get the exclamation mark during boot up, but kernel counter may be at "1" after this process.
Re-flashing my phone AND applying the three tricks I mentioned above worked for me..finally my phone is no longer crippled with crappy battery life and recharging is A LOT faster now.
I must be going crazy but this sg2 is killing me. I got it from Att yesterday and the battery life has been pretty HORRIBLE. (First time android user btw).
The phone will eat up 10% of my batter life after only 90 mins of idle. I checked the battery usage and Android OS is at around 78%!!! How do I fix this problem? I downloaded OS monitor and didn't really see anything that uses a lot of CPU, except for certain files syncing from time to time (but 2-3% usage usually).
Checked with battery spy and apparently the majority of the time, the phone was hovering around 200mhz 70% of the time and not deep sleep.
It's sad to have only 1.5 hours of display time with a battery of 45% left (7 hours total time)...coming from an Iphone 3gs, this is just unacceptable. I almost flashed to the 2.3.5 firmware but noticed it's NOT compatible with ATT's version of SG2.
I see people who have a total time of 2 days AND a screen time with 3 hours with 30% battery left. I wish I can get half that!
Running on 2.3.4, can't be the infamous drainage bug right? Thought that only happens with the 2.3.3s
Wifi on, application sync on, GPS off, brightness at 25%, using live wallpaper (the windmill). No active apps on. Downloaded aim, epocrates, battery monitor, cpu spy, and os monitor..rest of the apps are stock.
Update
According to my CPU spy
For the past hour that the phone was in idle
2:20mins at 1200mhz
4:52mins at 1000mhz
8:33 at 800mhz
1:28 at 500mhz
10:11 at 200mhz
33:36 in deep sleep
Currently Android CPU usage is @ 97%, display time of 7mins(2%)
2h 30mins since last charge (97% charge)..current power is 79%. Did nothing but idling and checking battery life.
So...that's 30 mins out of the hour in which my idling cellphone was hacking the pentagon....
Also the cellphone is a tiny bit warm to the touch (not cold)
I have 35% battery life remaining and have been unplugged for nearly 11 hours. This is significantly better than what I was getting with a Thunderbolt on Verizon, where I was needing to charge after about six hours of use. 11 hours and 35% remaining isn't the best in the world, but it's only been two days. The phone needs a few days to charge and discharge to determine true battery stats and will probably get better.
Being that this is your first Android battery life will not seem great but let it settle in for a few days it should get better.
Sent from my SAMSUNG-SGH-I777 using xda premium
Used Nexus S, LG Thrill, Samsung Focus, Infuse, This is the best Android phone for battery. I have 40% left with normal use (emails, calls, music, read news) at the end of the day. Huraaaaa
Singuy1234 said:
I must be going crazy but this sg2 is killing me. I got it from Att yesterday and the battery life has been pretty HORRIBLE. (First time android user btw).
The phone will eat up 10% of my batter life after only 90 mins of idle. I checked the battery usage and Android OS is at around 78%!!! How do I fix this problem? I downloaded OS monitor and didn't really see anything that uses a lot of CPU, except for certain files syncing from time to time (but 2-3% usage usually).
Checked with battery spy and apparently the majority of the time, the phone was hovering around 200mhz 70% of the time and not deep sleep.
It's sad to have only 1.5 hours of display time with a battery of 45% left (7 hours total time)...coming from an Iphone 3gs, this is just unacceptable. I almost flashed to the 2.3.5 firmware but noticed it's NOT compatible with ATT's version of SG2.
I see people who have a total time of 2 days AND a screen time with 3 hours with 30% battery left. I wish I can get half that!
Running on 2.3.4, can't be the infamous drainage bug right? Thought that only happens with the 2.3.3s
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
If you only got the phone yesterday, its way to early to make any judgments on battery life. Battery needs at least 3-5 days to settle in and build consistent battery stats.
Also, what are you settings? Auto Brightness, Bluetooth, GPS, auto syn(exchange emal, gmail, facebook, etc). If your not using these, they should be OFF. It's easy to manually refresh email, etc.
I've seen some people reporting very high Android OS(over 50%) but still getting solid battery life.
I'm at 1hr display time, heavy texting. 72% left, been unplugged for 12hrs
no people what this guy is talking about is the android os bug. i have it too. hopefully an upgrade or different rom will fix it. my phone has been unplugged 11 hours with only 1 1/2 hour display but android os has ran for 52 minutes and now im at 32% battery life. once this bug gets worked out the battery life will be amazing.
I don't think that there is an android OS bug. My android OS shows as being 42% with 13hrs of moderate use and I am still at 67% battery remaining. This is by far the best battery use I have ever experienced on an android device! My cappy would not even come close to this performance and this is on stock ROM and kernel.
Sent from my SAMSUNG-SGH-I777 using xda premium
I'm very happy with mine, this was the first total drain on a new battery so I know it will only get better.
Total time: 18hr 25min
Display time: 4hr 48min
I think it's the system os, not the hardware. There were a few times when the battery didn't discharge itself at 7%/hour (had it idle for 3 hours and it went down like 2%).
And yes, everything is turned off except the sync app data and wifi. There's no option to turn off 4g btw. It's just weird how sometimes it's in this mode of power drainage, and then sometimes it doesn't drain much..but most of the time, it's draining.
I seriously doubt the phone can only run 2.5 hours worth of heavy usage or 12 hours of standby (it should last days!). If this is "normal" for android, then maybe I should have a visit back to att and exchange for an iphone (and I really don't to!)
Sledutah said:
I'm very happy with mine, this was the first total drain on a new battery so I know it will only get better.
Total time: 18hr 25min
Display time: 4hr 48min
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
that is freakin incredible. i am gonna try a restore or something im down to 28% life. 1:40 display android os 1 hour.
can you please post the cpu total time in android os so i have an idea
VFO said:
I don't think that there is an android OS bug. My android OS shows as being 42% with 13hrs of moderate use and I am still at 67% battery remaining. This is by far the best battery use I have ever experienced on an android device! My cappy would not even come close to this performance and this is on stock ROM and kernel.
Sent from my SAMSUNG-SGH-I777 using xda premium
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
can you please post the cpu total time in android os so i have an idea
VFO said:
I don't think that there is an android OS bug. My android OS shows as being 42% with 13hrs of moderate use and I am still at 67% battery remaining. This is by far the best battery use I have ever experienced on an android device! My cappy would not even come close to this performance and this is on stock ROM and kernel.
Sent from my SAMSUNG-SGH-I777 using xda premium
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I agree - as I said in the Android OS drain thread, even in "good" situations, Android OS displays way high on our systems. I think it's a reporting bug.
I dropped 2% in 5.5 hours completely idle (sitting on my shelf) last night - Android OS was at over 60%. It seems that so far for me, the higher it is, the better my battery life is.
I drop around 15-20% in 9 hours of being mostly idle at my desk at work - it's a weak-signal location so the radio eats much more battery.
One thing is that unlike first-generation GalaxyS devices and interim ones like the Infuse, the GS2 has a coulomb-counter type of battery gauge. This type of gauge sometimes needs to be calibrated with multiple charge/discharge cycles or it will misreport battery state of charge. (However, when calibrated, it's much more accurate.)
Edit: I do have some power management tweaks in the kernel I'm running, but they don't make that much off a difference except in some high-drain corner cases in my experience. I'll be releasing it sometime later this week depending on how well these antibiotics do their job.
Do i need to install a battery app to see the percentage? or we have a way?
Install this app:
http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?p=15869868#post15869868
If you see "DataTracker-FD" or "Fast Dormancy" as the top wake lock, go into dialer
dial *#*#9900#*#*
disable Fast Dormancy (FD).
By default, the Samsung Galaxy S II has Fast Dormancy support enabled. One of the goals of Fast Dormancy is to increase the battery life of a device, by limiting the amount of signaling between the phone and the cell network. But, when Fast Dormancy it is not enabled in the network and is enabled on the phone it ironically works the other way around, and actually drains more battery than before.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
That applies to the I9100.
As far as I can tell, the I777 has FD disabled by default. (This may change once I9100 ROM ports start showing up)
Okay, charged my battery to 97%(I got a beep saying it's fully charged). Idled for the past 2 hours and 22 mins. Battery is at 86%.
According to the battery, my screen account for 2%, and the android system accounts for 97%.
This is a stock phone guys, I have no apps installed!
Entropy512 said:
One thing is that unlike first-generation GalaxyS devices and interim ones like the Infuse, the GS2 has a coulomb-counter type of battery gauge. This type of gauge sometimes needs to be calibrated with multiple charge/discharge cycles or it will misreport battery state of charge. (However, when calibrated, it's much more accurate.)
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
How do you calibrate it?
sweetboy02125 said:
Do i need to install a battery app to see the percentage? or we have a way?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Settings > About phone > Battery usage
WillEat4F00d said:
How do you calibrate it?
Settings > About phone > Battery usage
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I'm talking about live battery display. I installed no lock and have no lock screen to see how many % left.
sweetboy02125 said:
I'm talking about live battery display. I installed no lock and have no lock screen to see how many % left.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Just search up "battery indicator" in the Market and you'll get a few to choose from.
I too got mine yesterday and started tinkering around with installing apps and such to test out all functions before I rooted it and move onto cm7 most likely. The 1 things I noticed was that the battery was NOT completely full when it was first turned on at the store so once it got a little lower after playing with it I charged it up overnight. Today the battery was WAY BETTER and was not dead yet. I have been using it NON STOP today, rebooting it, testing it, trying to root it, rebooting some more, some time using tango to test it out, watched a Netflix movie, pretty much taking full advantage of it all day. I finally decided to charge it up and use my Captivate a bit. I didn't keep track of usage and times today but I KNOW it lasted a WAY LONGER time with all I was doing with it than my Cappy. Tomorrow I will check more out possibly before putting on a rom.
So LOOOONNNNGGGG STORY short make sure you charge it up once you get it before messing with it too much and then it will LAST LONGER.
Sent from My KickAss Captivated CM7 OC'd 1.5Ghz/Undervolted
After two nights of completely draining then recharging the battery to full, the battery has gotten significantly better. I'm trying to drain it again before I go to bed tonight but I don't think I'll make it.
I played the entirety of Toy Story 3 on max brightness, and only burned 20% of the battery!

Epic 4g Touch: High "android os" battery/system usage. Pinpointed two processes.

Epic 4g Touch: High "android os" battery/system usage. Pinpointed two processes.
"suspend" & "events/0"
what are those two processes and is there anything we can do about it?
BTW, Im running the newest version of starburst. Other than the battery thing, its great!
Well, after reading around some more, I see that these issues aren't newly discovered... I was just new to the phone, so it was new to me.
One thing I haven't read about, I noticed that while charging last night, the two processes dropped to 0% usage.
What is it about charging that changes the way the system runs and kills those processes?

VZW Galaxy S4 "krtccd" battery drain

Hello all, I hope I'm posting in the right section.
I've been searching for info on the battery drain problem for some time now. I have used GSam and System Panel to find the culprit and observe it for a while and I think I see what is happening. Don't know if there is anything to be done but I'm hoping there is a fix out there.
Background:
Stock Verizon Samsung Galaxy S4, stock Rom on latest OTA update (screen shot attached)
One morning around Christmas time my phone drained the battery from full to 10% in about 5 hours. I had my phone in my pocket like every other day at work, I had noticed it was heating up as well. I got an error message at some point that morning about some kind of "Samsung Power Share" I had never heard of. Then I could not get the phone to charge unless powered off, and that very slowly; it was the "grey battery" problem. This problem persisted for several days and then turned intermittent then nearly back to normal, though never quite right.
What I've done:
Wipe cache, FDR, replaced USB charge port, replaced stock battery with Anker battery.
The new charge port dramatically improved recharge time and eliminated the grey battery error but I still have terrible battery life compared to earlier in this phone's life, in other words, compared to before the latest OTA which appears to be a disaster. Didn't notice any significant improvement with the new battery.
Here's what I've seen:
As soon as the battery drops below 50% the rate of discharge maxes out and this matches up almost exactly with the activity or CPU usage of the system process "krtccd." (See attached pics showing krtccd activity corresponding with increased battery drain below 50%). GSam shows the "Kernel Android OS" (in which is krtccd) using 50% of the battery where it used to be that the screen was the biggest drain, pic attached.
Is there any way to control "krtccd" as it seems to go rogue? Why does it only seem to go rogue when the battery gets below 50%?
This is a company owned phone so rooting is not an option unfortunately.
Thank you so much for any input you may have!
I apologize if this posted in the wrong part of the forum. I did do a lot of attaching for info on what the krtccd process does and why it changed so drastically with the last OTA update but I can't find much out there or in here. I don't have the option to root phone so am I such with this weird poor performance whenever the battery drops below 50%?
Thanks again, I appreciate any input you guys have.
As a follow-up, here is a screen shot from System Panel this morning showing that "krtccd" stopped activity as soon as the battery began to charge. I don't get it, it's like it spins full bore in the background sabotaging the battery for the last 50%.
BTW, the discharge last night (in my first set of screen shots) happened while the phone dat idle on my windowsill, don't think I even turned the screen on during that whole time as I was in discussion with a friend. It's weird...
Rooted Galaxy S4 (Sprint)
Same issue. Can anyone provide any information on what this process does?
Someone opened an issue report with android open source.
Issue 160689: KRTCCD Bug?

Battery Drain due to CPU spike with "Phone" processes: Has anyone seen this?

Battery Drain due to CPU spike with "Phone" processes: Has anyone seen this?
I've had my S4 since it was released in April 2013. I'm running the MDK bootloader and have been running CM 12.1 for quite some time. About a month or so ago I noticed occasional bad battery drain to the point my battery would only last about 6 hours with almost no usage. When this occurs I can open OS Monitor and see that one of the "Phone" processes is sucking CPU which drains the battery. The processes that suck the CPU are one of the following: SIM Toolkit, Phone/Messaging Storage or Messaging Service. I'll often see 2 or 3 instances running of the same process running taking 30%-50% of CPU usage each. I am able to use OS Monitor to kill the process without any ill effects and the battery drain stops until the process starts spiking the CPU again. This happens randomly about once every day or two and I can't identify what triggers the processes to start sucking CPU. So far I have clean flashed the latest version of CM 12.1, rolled back the modem from OF1 to NK2, have been rebooting each morning and have tried cycling to airplane mode when the CPU spike occurs. Nothing has helped as the CPU suck and battery drain continue. Has anyone seen this or have any advice?
I wanted to post a reply in case anyone else is having this issue. It turns out the battery drain is caused by Missed Calls. Each time a call is missed, a "Phone" process is spawned and the battery drain starts. I have gotten in the habit of immediately killing the process after a missed call. If you use OS Monitor you'll see the process (SIM Toolkit, Phone/Messaging Storage, etc.) and the CPU usage at the top using the most CPU. You'll see this process hogging the CPU and it never ever stops unless the process is killed. This may be an issue with CM 12.1 on the S4 but I'm not sure as I haven't tried any other ROM's.

"Android OS" Process Taking Almost All The Battery Usage Percentage During Standby

"Android OS" Process Taking Almost All The Battery Usage Percentage During Standby
Hello! I have a question regarding the behavior of an Android system. I've seen many people reporting not only high battery usage from the "Android OS" process, but abnormal drainage as well. So my question is - is it normal for the "Android OS" process to have the highest battery percentage (without abnormally draining it) IN STANDBY, in Android 6? I'm talking about a situation of "pure" standby - no running and no useless background apps.
I'm asking because... for instance, I have an Android 4.4.2 (KitKat) phone as well, and when it's on standby, well... something has to consume the battery, right?... Even if it lasts 15 days or so in standby. So KitKat reports the highest percentages to be occupied by "Mobile standby" and "Phone idle"... it's a 50/50. No other process (including "Android OS") appears in the calculation.
I can assume that Android 6 has different algorithms for calculating battery usage than Android 4. Those stats seem to be more shallow and lossy at the 6. I'm saying it because I rarely see any app appearing in those stats, even after heavy usage.
Also, I made a clear distinction between abnormal drainage and a high battery usage percentage. (As long as a system is on, some process has to consume battery in order to make it "ready to go" and be able to keep it on standby.) My Android 6 system is not abnormally drained by that process... it's just that it has the highest percentage, followed by "Cell standby" and "Device idle". Is it normal? For the record, the Android 6 device I'm talking about is an Asus Zenfone Zoom (ZX551ML).
Many people reported high battery usage by "Android OS" and inexplicable drainage (Some couldn't get it to stay even a day in standby) as well from the mighty Zenfone Zoom, but during testing, my device turned out to be able to resist almost a week (if not more if I used it less) in a "pure" standby state (all the major functions were turned off - Wi-Fi, cell reception, NFC, touch gesture support, automatic brightness; also, I had no running apps). Of course, "Android OS" was reported to be the most consuming process in terms of battery power. I can assume it's a normal behavior and not an issue. Or... is it?
Even when I used it a bit, with some apps on, it was still a battery beast in standby. I attached some links to screenshots in the post, to make it more accurate and show what the approximate proportions between battery usages are.
[No, I didn't attach any links. They won't let me post links yet from spam control reasons... And not even attach damn images!]
I am making a call to you because I've seen very poor assistance on the official Asus support forums - very mediocre and unprofessional assistants with an overall poor technical sense and perception. You have an example of that particular issue (the abnormal drainage) here - [Ah, they don't let me post links yet! I'm a new member.]
I just want to shed light on whether such high battery usage from "Android OS" is normal or not (in a standby scenario, of course). Heavy draining in standby is clearly abnormal [as what the guy from that forum (the missing link) experiences].
I have to say (not that you wouldn't know it already!) that this combination of an Intel processor, a device of such huge proportions as the Zenfone Zoom and a 3000 mAh battery is not going to be a happy combination in terms of battery autonomy DURING USE. When I use it, I lose battery bars pretty quickly (It's expected from a such configuration; the Intel machinery is not very conservative in terms of power), but in standby and with little use, it can be an autonomy beast!

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