nbfc-revive
nbfc-linux
nbfc-revive | nbfc-linux | |
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14 | 12 | |
145 | 302 | |
- | 5.3% | |
2.8 | 9.0 | |
about 2 months ago | 19 days ago | |
C# | C | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 or later | GNU General Public License v3.0 only |
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.
nbfc-revive
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How to control the fan on an HP EliteBook laptop (NoteBook FanControl or similar)
The closest I've gotten to successful control is by using the nbfc-revive fork of NoteBook FanControl (https://github.com/UraniumDonut/nbfc-revive) by following these steps:
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Any software like FanControl?
For laptops there's nbfc or its rewrite nbfc-linux.
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LENOVO IDEAPAD I3 FANS TOO LOUD
One other idea, https://github.com/UraniumDonut/nbfc-revive
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just got this laptop today, are these sudden ups and downs in temperature normal?
I got rid of NitroSense and installed NBFC instead. (https://github.com/UraniumDonut/nbfc-revive) Fans go on when they should and off when they should. You know the laptop's very hot when NBFC ramps up the speed to the max as soon as Windows boots up.
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AN515-57-50AG
If it came with Windows 11, stay with Windows 11 unless you have a product key for Windows 10. Windows 11 garbage right now, but it'll catch up soon. Don't worry about undervolting. Just set your power plan to 99%. If you remove NitroSense and replace it with NBFC (https://github.com/UraniumDonut/nbfc-revive) you'll be golden.
- any tips to reduce temps as this is not normal i guess
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Nitro heating problem
Change your power settings to use 99% of the CPU. Also make sure you're using Notebook Fan Control. https://github.com/UraniumDonut/nbfc-revive
- MAX CPU Freq problem - PROHOT + POWER limit ( drops even to 800Mhz!)
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Do you know of a software that would do that on Windows? I think I have an overheating problem on my work laptop and would like to see at a glance temps and fans speed.
There's also a fork of it with more updates, since the other tool wasn't updated for quite some time: https://github.com/UraniumDonut/nbfc-revive
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Optimizing the Gigabyte AERO & Generally understanding Hardware (Silent Fans, Power Limits, Overclocking/Undervolting, Benchmarks)
I understand that some people want to avoid the CC at all cost. It might reduce battery life and it's a crappy peace of software in general. The Notebook Fan Control project got revived and it seems that in the next couple of days an update might be included that will support the 11800H. This would allow you to control the Fans without the CC. Some people uninstall CC completely (and lose the OSD, Keyboard Color Control, Power modes and thus the ability to raise the GPU Power limit), some have it autostart and kill it. If you write a script for that which kills CC on login and starts NBFC, this could be comfortable and you might keep the OSD. Also you could choose Turbo Mode and kill your CC afterwards. https://github.com/UraniumDonut/nbfc-revive
nbfc-linux
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How to control cooling Fans on Linux?
Does this work for every laptop, or just tuxedos? I'm currently using nbfc linux
- Fan control software for Ubuntu 22.04.2 LTS?
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Any software like FanControl?
For laptops there's nbfc or its rewrite nbfc-linux.
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Fan Control on Linux
https://github.com/nbfc-linux/nbfc-linux, it's serving me well
- Ask HN: Must have tools for a new Ubuntu laptop
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Fan Control for Laptop from Github
Obviously replace Your Laptop Model with your actual laptop model, from this list https://github.com/nbfc-linux/nbfc-linux/tree/main/share/nbfc/configs
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Fan control
https://github.com/hirschmann/nbfc I've used this in the past. The only part I don't like is it uses Mono, although it worked fine for me. There is also a linux port for this : https://github.com/nbfc-linux/nbfc-linux, but I'm having trouble with it.
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Can't get fan speed using sensors.
sorry I'm not much of a hardware guy at all, so that lspci output is kind of alien to me... could the Serial Controller have anything to do with the fan...? btw, I forgot to mention that while I cannot get the fan speed in rpm, I could control it with nbfc-linux by using the pre-made profile for either the 8460p or 8460w iirc, on Artix Linux. Fairly recently made a clean install of Mint, though. Thanks for your help!
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Installing nbfc-linux using make command
git clone https://github.com/nbfc-linux/nbfc-linux.git cd nbfc-linux make && sudo make install
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my issues with linux as a new power user from windows and light mac use (more in comments)
Exactly! I use config for Acer Predator G3-572. If that won't work just try some Acer configs it shoud work. Here's the github repo for nbfc-linux: https://github.com/nbfc-linux/nbfc-linux
What are some alternatives?
nbfc - NoteBook FanControl
mbpfan - A simple daemon to control fan speed on all MacBook/MacBook Pros (probably all Apple computers) for Linux Kernel 3 and newer
FanControl.Releases - This is the release repository for Fan Control, a highly customizable fan controlling software for Windows.
liquidctl - Cross-platform CLI and Python drivers for AIO liquid coolers and other devices
nbfc-linux - NoteBook FanControl ported to Linux
lm-sensors - lm-sensors repository
fancontrol-gui - GUI for Fancontrol. It uses the KAuth module of the KDE Frameworks 5 to write the generated config file. Furthermore it communicates with systemd via dbus to control the fancontrol service. If you want to compile without systemd support set the -DNO_SYSTEMD option.
cm4io-fan - CM4 IO board PWM fan controller driver
asus-fan - Kernel module to get/set (both) fan speed(s) on ASUS Zenbooks
rogauracore - RGB keyboard control for Asus ROG laptops