Difference between revisions of "Talk:Patch for controlling fan speed"

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(added script that's able to daemonize via command line option)
m (Updated script for unpatched kernels: fixed sed call)
Line 146: Line 146:
  
 
speedometer() { # output fan speed RPM
 
speedometer() { # output fan speed RPM
     cat $IBM_ACPI/fan | sed '/^speed/!d; s/speed:[ \t]*//'
+
     sed -n 's/^speed:[ \t]*//p' $IBM_ACPI/fan
 
}
 
}
  

Revision as of 21:26, 7 November 2005

Windows XP port

How would I port this patch to Windows XP?

--Jason

You can't. But you can write a Windows device driver based on the specs and ibm-acpi.

--Thinker 18:54, 7 Nov 2005 (CET)

gkrellm support

I can confirm that it works on Thinkpad T43 here. However after applying the patch, the fan speed monitor of gkrellm 2.2.7 cannot read value correctly. Maybe we gkrellm is reading the second line for speed but instead find the line for level, so it got confused? Would it be possible to interchange the lines so that speed still appears in the second line and level appears in the third instead? I'm no coder, just a suggestion to improve the patch.

--Jiang

I'd say it's a bug in gkrellm. It should parse the line header rather than relying on line numbers. But feel free to change (and test) the patch if you wish.

--Thinker 05:14, 26 Oct 2005 (CEST)

patch to keep gkrell working against 2.6.14

As in "works for me on a T43p", use with caution at your own risk. And thanks to thinker for the original patch, very nice work.

(See article for the actual patch)

--Spiney

Looks excellent, why not add it to the article page? Also, care to provide a license (preferably public domain like my patch) so the kernel guys can handle it? Speaking of which, the kernel people seem to like their patches generated via "diff -up vanilla-kernel-2.6.14 patched-kernel-2.6.14".

--Thinker 22:04, 1 Nov 2005 (CET)

Done, using the -p option for diff and "borrowing" your sentence for licensing purposes.

--Spiney


Updated script for unpatched kernels

A couple of command line options added, plus this version is able to daemonize and writes a pid file (to a custom location if needed). It's for an unpatched version of the kernel, since I think that's the way to go, but it should be easy to merge into the other version as well since it doesn't change any internals.

Any feedback appreciated.

Here we go:

#!/bin/bash

# This script dynamically controls fan speed on some ThinkPad models
# according to user-defined temperature thresholds.  It implements its
# own decision algorithm, overriding the ThinkPad embedded
# controller. It also implements a workaround for the fan noise pulse
# experienced every few seconds on some ThinkPads.
#
# WARNING: This script relies on undocumented hardware features and
# overrides nominal hardware behavior. It may thus cause arbitrary
# damage to your laptop or data. Watch your temperatures!
#
# This file is placed in the public domain and may be freely distributed.

LEVELS=(    0      2      4      7)  # Fan speed levels
UP_TEMPS=(      52     60     68  )  # Speed increase trip points
DOWN_TEMPS=(  48     56     64    )  # Speed decrease trip points

ANTIPULSE=( 0      1      0      0)  # Prevent fan pulsing noise at this level
                                     #   (this also prevents fan speed updates)

IBM_ACPI=/proc/acpi/ibm
PID_FILE=/var/run/tp-fancontrol.pid
INTERVAL=3
VERBOSE=true
DRY_RUN=false
DAEMONIZE=false

usage() {
        echo "Usage: $0 [OPTION]..."
        echo
        echo "Available options:"
        echo "   -t     test mode"
        echo "   -q     quiet mode"
        echo "   -d     daemon mode, go into background, implies -q"
        echo "   -p     pid file location for daemon mode, default: $PID_FILE"
}

set -- `getopt -u -n $0 qtdp:h "$@"`

while true; do
        case "$1" in
                -t)
                        DRY_RUN=true
                        echo "$0: Dry run, will not change fan state."
                        shift
                        ;;
                -q) # quiet mode
                        VERBOSE=false
                        shift
                        ;;
                -d) # go into background and daemonize
                        DAEMONIZE=true
                        shift
                        ;;
                -p) # different pidfile
                        PID_FILE="$2"
                        shift 2
                        ;;
                -h) # short help
                        usage
                        exit 1
                        ;;
                --) # no more options
                        shift
                        break
                        ;;
        esac
done

if $DRY_RUN; then
        VERBOSE=true
        DAEMONIZE=false
fi

if $DAEMONIZE ; then
        (
                exec $0 -q -p $PID_FILE 0>&- 1>&- 2>&-
        ) &
        echo $! > $PID_FILE
        exit 0
fi

# Enable the fan in default mode if anything goes wrong:
set -e -E -u
$DRY_RUN || trap "rm -f $PID_FILE 2> /dev/null; echo enable > $IBM_ACPI/fan; exit 0" EXIT HUP INT ABRT QUIT SEGV TERM

thermometer() { # output list of temperatures
    read X Y < $IBM_ACPI/thermal
    if ! [[ "$X" == "temperatures:" ]]; then
        echo "$0: Bad temperatures: $X $Y" >&2
        exit 1
    fi
    echo "$Y";
}

speedometer() { # output fan speed RPM
    sed -n 's/^speed:[ \t]*//p' $IBM_ACPI/fan
}

setlevel() { # set fan speed level
    $DRY_RUN || echo 0x2F $1 > $IBM_ACPI/ecdump
}

IDX=0
MAX_IDX=$(( ${#LEVELS[@]} - 1 ))
SETTLE=0

while true; do
    TEMPS=`thermometer`
    $VERBOSE && SPEED=`speedometer`

    # Calculate new level
    NEWIDX=$IDX
    DOWN=$(( IDX > 0 ))
    for TEMP in $TEMPS; do
        # Increase speed as much as needed
        while [[ $NEWIDX -lt $MAX_IDX ]] && 
              [[ $TEMP -ge ${UP_TEMPS[$NEWIDX]} ]]; do
            (( NEWIDX ++ ))
            DOWN=0
        done
        # Allow decrease (by one index)?
        if [[ $DOWN == 1 ]] &&
           [[ $TEMP -gt ${DOWN_TEMPS[$(( IDX - 1 ))]} ]]; then
            DOWN=0
        fi
    done
    if [[ $DOWN == 1 ]]; then
        NEWIDX=$(( IDX - 1 ))
    fi

    # Transition
    OLDLEVEL=${LEVELS[$IDX]}
    NEWLEVEL=${LEVELS[$NEWIDX]}
    $VERBOSE && echo "tpfan: Temps: $TEMPS   Fan: $SPEED   Level: $OLDLEVEL->$NEWLEVEL"
    setlevel $NEWLEVEL

    sleep $INTERVAL

    # If needed, apply anti-pulsing hack after a settle-down period:
    if [[ ${ANTIPULSE[${NEWIDX}]} == 1 ]]; then
        if [[ $NEWLEVEL == $OLDLEVEL ]]; then
            if [[ $SETTLE -ge 0 ]]; then
                (( SETTLE -= INTERVAL ))
            else
                setlevel 0x40 # disengaged
                sleep 0.5
            fi
        else
            SETTLE=6
        fi
    fi

    IDX=$NEWIDX
done

As usual, I disclaim all warranty for this script, and release it to the public domain (meaning you may use and further distribute it under any terms you wish, including incorporating it into other software).

--Spiney, Nov 7 2005, 19:46 (CET)