From 962c35425636e3f942fd8a624369a7c53748f47e Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Azat Bahawi Date: Thu, 1 Jan 1970 03:00:00 +0300 Subject: chore: init --- etc/thinkfan.conf | 107 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ 1 file changed, 107 insertions(+) create mode 100644 etc/thinkfan.conf (limited to 'etc/thinkfan.conf') diff --git a/etc/thinkfan.conf b/etc/thinkfan.conf new file mode 100644 index 0000000..1784896 --- /dev/null +++ b/etc/thinkfan.conf @@ -0,0 +1,107 @@ +###################################################################### +## thinkfan 0.9 example config file +## ================================ +## +## ATTENTION: There is only very basic sanity checking on the configuration. +## That means you can set your temperature limits as insane as you like. You +## can do anything stupid, e.g. turn off your fan when your CPU reaches 70°C. +## +## That's why this program is called thinkfan: You gotta think for yourself. +## +####################################################################### +## +## This file shows how to use sensor-specific temperature limits. +## First of all, you need to specify temperature inputs. On a Thinkpad, you can +## just use: +## +#tp_thermal /proc/acpi/ibm/thermal # provides us with 16 temperature inputs + +## +## On other systems, you have to specify a file in /sys/class/hwmon for each +## sensor you want to use. They are numbered in their order of appearance. +## For example: +# +# hwmon /sys/class/hwmon5/temp2_input #1 +# hwmon /sys/class/hwmon0/device/temp3_input #2 +# +## If you want to read temperatures directly from the hard disk, thinkfan needs +## to be compiled with -DUSE_ATASMART. Then you can do: +# +# atasmart /dev/sda #3 +# ... +# +## You can have as many temperature inputs as you like. You should at get the +## temperature from the CPU, the GPU and the hard disk. +# +hwmon /sys/devices/platform/coretemp.0/hwmon/hwmon1/temp1_input +hwmon /sys/devices/platform/coretemp.0/hwmon/hwmon1/temp2_input +hwmon /sys/devices/platform/coretemp.0/hwmon/hwmon1/temp3_input + +# +## Next we specify the fan we want to use. On a Thinkpad, this is: +# +tp_fan /proc/acpi/ibm/fan + +# +## On anything other than a Thinkpad you'll probably use some PWM control file +## in /sys/class/hwmon. Remember that fan levels range from 0 to 255 and that +## they're just a number, not including the word "level" as seen below. +## A sysfs fan would be specified like this: +# +# pwm_fan /sys/class/hwmon/hwmon2/device/pwm1 +# +## But remember you can only have one fan. + +# +## Then you need to specify the temperature limits for each of the sensors. +## A dot means that the corresponding sensor should be ignored. The length of the +## UPPER and LOWER limits must be the same as the number of temperatures. In this +## example, /proc/acpi/ibm/thermal contains 16 sensors (on older thinkpads, +## there may be only 8), some of which are unused (hence the dots). +## A sysfs temperature input always contains only one sensor, so if you specify +## 5 sysfs files above, the length of your limits must be 5, too. +# +## I've come up with these preliminary settings for my Thinkpad T61p. They probably +## don't make sense for anything else, so you most definitely have to work +## something out for yourself. +# +{ "level 0" # the fan level +# ^-------^ This works for /proc/acpi/ibm/thermal. +# for a PWM fan in /sys/class/hwmon it would have to be just +# 0 or "0". +# +# Sensor count: +# 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 +# ============================================== + (0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0) # LOWER limit + (54 42 42 54 42 . 42 . 42 46 54 . . . . .) # UPPER limit +} + +{ "level 1" +# ^-------^ For a PWM fan you may have to use something around 30 to get the +# same speed. + (46 39 39 48 39 . 39 . 41 44 46 . . . . .) + (58 45 45 60 45 . 45 . 45 47 56 . . . . .) +} + +{ "level 3" + (52 43 43 57 43 . 43 . 43 45 51 . . . . .) + (62 48 48 67 48 . 48 . 48 48 57 . . . . .) +} + +{ "level 5" + (56 46 46 65 46 . 46 . 46 46 52 . . . . .) + (66 49 49 69 49 . 49 . 49 49 58 . . . . .) +} + +{ "level 7" + (63 47 47 67 47 . 47 . 47 47 50 . . . . .) + (73 55 55 83 60 . 60 . 60 60 64 . . . . .) +} + +{ "level disengaged" # nice idea: "level auto" can also be used. + # but again: only numbers for sysfs. + (69 50 50 75 55 . 55 . 55 55 55 . . . . .) + (99 99 99 99 99 . 99 . 99 99 99 . . . . .) +} + -- cgit 1.4.1