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by toast0
1301 days ago
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> why do people want to use hwmon to set fan RPMs? (Or really, why do this from userspace at all?) Some people want to have a mode switch; normal use should be silent/quiet, but when you know you're going to do something big (game, big compile, etc), fix the fans at full so the noise is consistent and cooling is best. (the cooler the chip, the more the boost) Some people have no good options from the system firmware, and getting _something_ configurable is better. I've run on systems where I couldn't tell the system to actually run the fan, so things would get hot and throttle. Userspace configurability is better than nothing. This tends to be a bigger issue on things that are sold as a whole computer, like laptops, and small formfactor things (which are often pretty much laptops without a battery and built in user interface devices) but also some name brand desktops. My recent motherboards all seem to have a pretty nice fan configuration tool. Presets for quiet/performance/full speed, and a simple graph based UI to set % by temperature. Most of the fan headers can be set to follow the cpu temperature or the system temperature. When you buy the nice Noctua fans, they also ship 'low noise adapters' that I assume drop the voltage and limit the maximum RPMs and limit noise. Depending on your overall cooling design, that can be reasonable or asking for trouble. |
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Yeah, I don't doubt someone is like that … I'd just rather it be automatic.
> My recent motherboards all seem to have a pretty nice fan configuration tool.
Mine has a "flashy" tool, I would say. Certainly looks pretty, but again, it's all constant RPM options.
As I lament in the other thread, this is something that would differentiate boards at time of purchase, but no mobo manufacturers marketing dept. seems to have it's shit together enough to get such a differentiation across to the consumer. Instead the focus seems to be completely on the aesthetics of how the board looks.
And again, I've chalked this up to having chosen poorly. But there-in is the problem: assuming I chose poorly, assuming some mobos do support sane defaults/fetures … how do I end up finding and purchasing one of those? Any knowledge I acquire during a purchase is useless the next time around, given the constant product churn HW manufacturers nonsensically do.