asus-fan-control
corectrl
asus-fan-control | corectrl | |
---|---|---|
9 | 309 | |
301 | - | |
- | - | |
4.5 | - | |
2 months ago | - | |
Shell | ||
MIT License | - |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
asus-fan-control
-
Control laptop's fans
First, no way to ajust fan curve in the BIOS. We already tried Asus Fan Control, nbfc-linux and both didn't worked.
-
Help with KDE neon fan controls on asus vivobook pro 14 oled
Hi there! I recently switched over from windows 11 to kde neon (windows wasnt cutting it for my purposes), and I noticed that I have no way to control my asus vivobook pro 14 oled (m3401) fan controls. I did fix up the issues with battery capacity controls with tools like TLP, but I have not been able to control the fan speed (i wanna make it go fast cuz im not exactly comfortable at 99C during large compiles (im a student, and i kinda need to run compiles on the move)). On windows I was just able to use the MyAsus app and use the performance profile for my fans but I can't do that here because of no MyAsus. I found this wonderful tool called asus-fan-control, sadly it does not support AMD CPUs (I opened a ticket, which if you wanna check out, https://github.com/dominiksalvet/asus-fan-control/issues/120 is the link). What would be a way I can get around this issue? i don't wanna have to repaste this laptop anytime soon (maybe at least run it for 2 years before i end up repasting it). I did not run into such high temps on windows (probably because MyAsus took care of it), but I can't (and don't want to) switch back to windows because I am more familiar to linux than I am to windows (not to mention, it is more convenient for my projects).
- Asus TUF A15
-
Anyone else confused with Linus Linux issues?
You could try contributing to asus-fan-control.
-
ASUS fan control? (ASUS TUF Gaming FX505)
Also surprised you didn't find asus-fan-control (https://github.com/dominiksalvet/asus-fan-control) considering I found it in a two second search and it says it supports the FX505.
- CPU fan spinning at max speed, cannot control it.
- Custom CPU/GPU Fan Curve Support For Some ASUS Laptops On Linux
-
Is there any way to have a system management software like myasus or omen command centre in fedora 34?
Check out https://github.com/dominiksalvet/asus-fan-control and https://wiki.archlinux.org/title/fan_speed_control#ASUS_laptops for fan management utils. As stated in another comment, TLP can set battery saving thresholds.
-
Install kernal modules on fedora
So i went to https://github.com/dominiksalvet/asus-fan-control#install to install a fan control app but one of the dependencies is a kernel module any idea how to install it or an alternative to this app that works on fedora
corectrl
-
I forked SteamOS for my living room PC
> I only want some decent fan control instead of relying on random scripts off github. AMD has to release some sort of GUI panel for sure.
Have you tried CoreCtrl [0]?
> My 5800x3D and 6800XT deliver an outstanding Linux gaming experience.
I have a 7900XTX and performance under Linux has been at least on par with Windows, sometimes better (though not by much).
> May i ask what driver features are you missing?
I'm not GP but I'd love to see frame gen and stuff like anti-lag and upscaling integrated into amdgpu with some sort of official way of setting it (though looking at Adrenaline it might actually be best if it's left up to the community to create the GUIs).
[0] https://gitlab.com/corectrl/corectrl
- Any luck with giving permissions to corectrl? Also steam games question.
-
How do I underclock my 7800 xt on arch linux?
Basically the 7800 xt has this bug where I need to lower the core clock of -80mhz to avoid it crashing with 2 different hdmi/vga monitors or something. On windows no problems, but what about arch linux? How do I lower it? Looks like corectrl doesn´t support 7000 series gpus (from what I understood), please help yall!
-
Is this apllied to 23.10 or just older Ubuntu?
sudo grub-mkconfig -o /boot/grub/grub.cfg Reboot your system. You should have more controls when you select Advanced as Performance mode. https://gitlab.com/corectrl/corectrl/-/wikis/Setup
- Recommendations for new AMD GPU setup
-
AMD's 7900 XTX achieves better value for Stable Diffusion than Nvidia RTX 4080
> The AMD experience on Linux is vastly better than the Nvidia one.
I just wish we had an equivalent of AMD Software on Linux, so I could mess around with the settings more.
For example, I like to limit the GPU to 50-75% of it's total power for ambient heat/cooling reasons, or UPS/PSU/electricity bill reasons when specific games make it hard to cap framerates.
With AMD Software on Windows, it's no big deal. On Linux, the best I found was CoreCtrl: https://gitlab.com/corectrl/corectrl
Sadly, it doesn't seem to work all that well for my use case, which I mentioned in my blog post when using Linux instead of Windows as my daily driver at home too: https://blog.kronis.dev/articles/a-week-of-linux-instead-of-...
> You see, by default the card controls its own GPU and memory clock values, which means that when idle the GPU draws around 40 W of power. However, if I want to set a limit for how much W in total it can use, it also makes me set the GPU and memory clock values, which will them be fixed: so at idle the GPU will use about 60 W of power.
- Problem in game fedora 38
-
AMD really need to fix this. (7900 XTX vs 4080 power consumption)
If you set it to POWER_SAVING instead of 3D_FULL_SCREEN, it uses the highest boost clock a lot less. Or if you use something like corectrl's application profiles (maybe the Windows vendor driver control panel has them?), you can selectively disable boost clock states in specific games.
-
Motherboard for Gamers
I'm bias toward Asus motherboards. I have an "Asus TUF GAMING B550-PLUS WIFI II" and a "Asus ROG Crosshair VIII Hero (WI-FI) ATX". Both boards have a fan control feature in the BIOS/EFI. On the Windows side both boards come with Ai Suite 3 software. On the Linux side you might want to take a look at Corectrl ==> https://gitlab.com/corectrl/corectrl
-
Where/how can I get Radeon Adrenaline software for Linux
I think CoreCtrl might offer some of what you're looking for.
What are some alternatives?
tuf-controller - A simple GUI made using swing java to change keyboard led color and fan modes in asus TUF series laptop.
radeon-profile - Application to read current clocks of ATi Radeon cards (xf86-video-ati, xf86-video-amdgpu)
asusctl
System76 Power Management - System76 Power Management
asusctl - Daemon and tools to control your ASUS ROG laptop. Supersedes rog-core.
gamemode - Optimise Linux system performance on demand
nbfc - NoteBook FanControl
tuxclocker - Qt overclocking tool for GNU/Linux
ArchLinux-Maintenance-Script - An all-in-one script that simplifies system maintenance on Arch Linux.
amdgpu-clocks - Simple script to control power states of amdgpu driven GPUs
tuxedo-corefix-clevo-nh5xax - Fix for Clevo NH5xAx with Ryzen 9 3950x to make use of CPU cores 25-32
kernelstub - A simple EFI boot manager manager for Linux