On Wed, Dec 2, 2020, 12:57 Chris Murphy, <lists@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
On Wed, Dec 2, 2020 at 9:39 AM Fulko Hew <fulko.hew@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
>
> It's been a bad week for me.
> First my disk drive died, and now I've replaced it
> and installed F33 (up from F26)
>
> After running it for a while it started running flaky,
> I hadn't installed gkrellm yet.
> When I did, I noticed that it was reporting a fan speed of 0 RPM.
> True, it wasn't spinning. Maybe it was overheating that that's why it was getting flaky.
>
> [I ran the Dell BIOS hardware test routines, and they spun up the
> fan and reported no errors.]
>
> So I know the fan works, and presumably thats why the hw test
> spun it up and spun it down again.
> What I'd like to do is to manually control the fan and look at it's
> sensor directly (like the Dell hw test does), but I don't know how.
>
> Laptop is a Dell Inspiron 5567.
> I'm not sure where to go next.
> Thanks
>
> Here's a snippet from running 'sensors':
>
> $ sensors
> dell_smm-virtual-0
> Adapter: Virtual device
> Processor Fan: 0 RPM
> CPU: +36.0°C
> Ambient: +34.0°C
> SODIMM: +34.0°C
> GPU: +30.0°C
> ...
Quite a lot of thermal management is split up into different areas:
CPU itself, ACPI, logic board firmware, kernel, and user space.
I suggest making sure the logic board firmware is up to date as a first step.
sensors isn't a default package. New in Fedora 33, thermald is
installed and enabled by default. I'd give that a chance to work (or
fail) on it's own without anything else competing. It's expected that
thermald improves thermal management, but at least to not do worse
than not using it. If the thermal behavior isn't correct with thermald
enabled in a default configuration, then the next test is to disable
thermald and see if the same behavior still happens. If that fixes the
problem, I suggest a thermald bug report. If it doesn't fix the
problem, then we need to look at a possible kernel regression.
There are some user space tools that can directly manipulate fans if
none of the above works out of the box, but I'd consider that a
fallback
I'm not at the machine at the moment, but can you name some of those user space tools ?
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