![]() I've tried to config it using pwmconfig which could stop and speed up the fans during the configuration, but after saving config to /etc/fancontrol it did not help at all and fans are still spinning. On the same machine on Windows 10, fans are switched off when the system is cooled down. Once the fans are started to spin, they are spinning forever even when the system is cooled down (cpu and GPU has about +30C for more than hour). I've noticed problems with fan control on Linux (I've tried many distros and kernels from 4.4 to 4.6.2, run it on nvidia or intel gpu only, but the problem is the same). In my own non-Lenovo non-noteboot desktop I’ve just fallen back to manually configured fan speed steps defined in the BIOS and only use the Linux sensors for monitoring.I have Dell Inspiron 7559 with i7 cpu. I often consult the arch docs even though I use Tumbleweed (arch being too labour intensive for my tastes). The arch doc seems to state there is a thinkfan non-lm-sensors option which makes available /proc/acpi/ibm/fan or /proc/acpi/ibm/thermal. The arch documentation is usually pretty good: I would of thought it would have been sorted by now (Lenovo being quite popular). I’m running it right now on my P14s and it works great, I don’t even use thinkfan anymore, since the fan is quiet out of the box.Īt least it would be a distro that I haven’t tried out yet lol! The writer of the blogpost in the first link says:Īlthough, if you’re not very fond of Debian, I can recommend installing Fedora 35 on your laptop. There’s no older version than 5.16 in Yast, or I am too stupid. I searched for an older kernel version in Yast - preferrably 5.2, since they claim it was working in 5.2, but I didn’t succeed. When I look into the folder i get that there’s indeed no temp1_input.ĭevice in0_input name power subsystem uevent In this s-tui issue I found, that it’s probably a kernel problem. It’s similar like the fedora config you were referring to, but using the structured YAML syntax.]( ) I did the config according to this post: Lm_sensors was installed and the sensors command give me a reasonable output. This time I really want to stay with linux. ![]() I’m trying to switch to linux already for quite some time to finally emancipate from windows, but I’m always getting thrown back by issues like these. Graphics Processor: Mesa Intel® Xe Graphics Operating System: openSUSE Tumbleweed 20220226 I would also go for another software to control the fan speed, if there is anything reliable. I’m getting either the ERROR: /sys/class/hwmon/hwmon0/temp1_input: No such file or director I’m aiming to adjust the fan speed with thinkfan, but i wouldn’t start. Obviously not a linux problem, but Lenovo did some really bad work here. However, the fan of the notebook is driving me crazy. (That wasn’t the case with Ubuntu and Linux Mint MX Linux worked quite well but had some other issues.) I’m using a Lenovo P14s Gen2 (Intel version with Nvidia T500) and everything worked out of the box. I absolutely love it, you guys are doing a great work. I’m quite new in the linux world and I just got openSUSE Tumbleweed with KDE installed.
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