![]() The pwmconfig gave the same response, no sensor found! I searched the internet and found this method and did this to grub file GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX_DEFAULT="quiet splash acpi_enforce_resources=lax"Īnd updated the grub and restarted. I then ran pwmconfig and got this response /usr/sbin/pwmconfig: There are no pwm-capable sensor modules installed ![]() Then I ran sensors and got the below response * Chip `Intel digital thermal sensor' (confidence: 9)ĭo you want to overwrite /etc/sysconfig/lm_sensors? (YES/no): YES I installed lm_sensors and ran sudo sensors-detect and gave Yes to everything for scan and this was the output Now follows a summary of the probes I have just done. So, I recently installed Fedora on my HP Envy 14 (2021) and wanted to get fan controls on it. Mailing list: Fedora Testers (for Fedora Beta releases).Discord: discord.gg/fedora (Voice & Text chat).Post content regarding Fedora Project or Linux in general.This subreddit is not affiliated with or endorsed by the Fedora Project. But this seems rather inelegant to me and after a reboot you have to remount the driver every time, which is probably due to the missing "lm_rvice" file.A community for users, developers and people interested in the Fedora Project and news and information about it. With "insmod /volume1/Drivers/nct6775.ko" the integration worked and "sensors" shows the values of the nct6775. To be able to include these drivers somehow, I downloaded the modules directly from the loader's website, created a folder "Drivers" on my hard disk in volume1 and copied the unzipped modules into it. Since I used the same installation via Entware as you, how did you create the "lm_rvice" file and solve the problem? "prog/init/lm_rvice" does not exist as well as the folder "/prog" does not exist at all - there is no "lm_rvice" file on the whole system. ![]() * Chip `Intel digital thermal sensor' (confidence: 9)Ĭhip `Nuvoton NCT5573D/NCT5577D/NCT6776F Super IO Sensors' (confidence: 9)Ĭhip `ON CAT6095/CAT34TS02' (confidence: 5)ĭo you want to generate /etc/sysconfig/lm_sensors? (YES/no): yesĬopy prog/init/lm_rvice to /usr/lib/systemd/systemĪnd run 'systemctl enable lm_rvice' Now follows a summary of the probes I have just done. "sensors-detect" showed the following after a complete scan: Are they mirrored somewhere in the system or can they somehow be extracted directly from the loaderstick? Apparently these modules are only present as a platform-dependent packed file on the loaderstick. Both have been activated as modules on the loaderstick (I have activated all modules), but are apparently not loaded by the system, respectively an "insmod nct6775.ko" as root does not work. ![]() "sensors" as root initially showed only the coretemps, sensors-detect discovered other control chips, namely a nct6775 and a jc42. So I installed Entware with opkg, lm-sensors-detect and lm-sensors. It is clear to me that for controlling the fan I need a working lm-sensors first. However, like many others here, I am also trying to reduce the rampant noise from my main fan, ideally it will at least adjust to the hard drive temperatures. Thanks for the links to the pwmconfig and fancontrol scripts, new to Xpenology and unfortunately am not a Linux expert either. ![]()
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