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by g051051
849 days ago
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Fun fact: Ryzen Master needs a kernel driver installed in order to function. This driver was signed with a cert that expired a while back. For years they required you to disable virtualization based security (because as a side effect it would also disable driver signature enforcement). When this first popped up, rather the fix the signature, they added a check to detect VBS and block starting if it's enabled. Then Microsoft made VBS and DSE separate settings, so now it gives a misleading error message. There was a patcher program that would workaround the issue, but it doesn't work for the most recent versions, unfortunately. |
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Aside from any driver signing issues, I think there's also an underlying common issue that the virtualization layer needs to pass through the CPU model-specific registers (MSRs) that are the hardware interface for tweaking power and clock limits.