Quote Originally Posted by voron00 View Post
Sensor drivers are usually in linux kernel. Have you tried upgrading to latest?
Lord, I don't want this to escalate https://xkcd.com/456/

Quote Originally Posted by Mitch View Post
https://packages.debian.org/jessie/lm-sensors
PHP Code:
sudo sensors-detect 
Nice, didn't check sensors-detect before, so I added the module to /etc/modules now and restarted, so now the other tools actually detect my fan. But pwmconfig cannot even disable pwm2 (which is my CPU fan). I reseached a bit and I can handle it manually very easily:


Code:
user-desktop hwmon0 # cd /sys/devices/platform/nct6775.656/hwmon/hwmon0
user-desktop hwmon0 # echo pwm2_enable
pwm2_enable
user-desktop hwmon0 # cat pwm2_enable
0
user-desktop hwmon0 # echo "1" >  pwm2_enable
user-desktop hwmon0 # cat pwm2_enable
0
user-desktop hwmon0 # echo "255" > pwm2
user-desktop hwmon0 # echo "1" >  pwm2_enable
user-desktop hwmon0 # echo "255" > pwm2
user-desktop hwmon0 # echo "1" >  pwm2_enable
user-desktop hwmon0 # cat pwm2_enable
0
user-desktop hwmon0 # echo "0" > pwm2
user-desktop hwmon0 # echo "10" > pwm2
user-desktop hwmon0 # echo "0" > pwm2
user-desktop hwmon0 # cat pwm2_enable
1
Probably would be easiest to write a little php script which reads the temp and fixes the RPM (0-255), running in background as root. But cba atm, it's so typically Linux, most basic shit just doesn't work lol

This was also quite interesting: https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/fan_speed_control