There is a fancontrol tool in Linux (Debian included), but it has no GUI. Nevertheless, it's more convenient and safe to let your motherboard control your fans, otherwise it's an easiest way to burn something inside your PC. Personally, I let my motherboard control fans in my PC, and I monitor their speeds using lm-sensors and conky GUI. Answer from Aristeo812 on reddit.com
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Debian Manpages
manpages.debian.org β€Ί unstable β€Ί fancontrol β€Ί fancontrol.8.en.html
fancontrol(8) β€” fancontrol β€” Debian unstable β€” Debian Manpages
April 12, 2025 - It reads its configuration from a file, then calculates fan speeds from temperatures and sets the corresponding PWM outputs to the computed values.
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Stack Exchange
unix.stackexchange.com β€Ί questions β€Ί 590307 β€Ί how-to-manually-set-cpu-fan-speed-in-debian-linux
How to manually set CPU Fan Speed in Debian Linux? - Unix & Linux Stack Exchange
June 1, 2020 - I then ran the fancontrol configuration script with pwmconfig: hwmon0 is it8620 hwmon1 is k10temp hwmon2 is fam15h_power hwmon3 is radeon Found the following PWM controls: hwmon0/pwm1 current value: 0 hwmon0/pwm2 current value: 0 hwmon0/pwm3 current value: 0 hwmon0/pwm4 current value: 255 hwmon0/pwm5 current value: 255 Giving the fans some time to reach full speed...
Discussions

[Help needed] Fan control on headless linux server
Apparently you need to upgrade to a very recent kernel version: https://www.phoronix.com/news/Intel-GPU-Fan-Speed-Linux More on reddit.com
🌐 r/debian
10
1
November 25, 2024
Fan control software for Linux?
There is a fancontrol tool in Linux (Debian included), but it has no GUI. Nevertheless, it's more convenient and safe to let your motherboard control your fans, otherwise it's an easiest way to burn something inside your PC. Personally, I let my motherboard control fans in my PC, and I monitor their speeds using lm-sensors and conky GUI. More on reddit.com
🌐 r/linux4noobs
31
84
June 6, 2022
Recent Linux transition however fan control is lost.

I run a second monitor for my laptop and the fans decide to just go mental for no reason when I'm not even running anything intensive

It's probably due to the memory clock on the dedicated graphics increasing in response to the multi-monitor setup. It may well be heating the vram and causing the fans to ramp up.

More on reddit.com
🌐 r/linux_gaming
3
3
December 20, 2023
Is there any full featured fan control software for Linux, like SpeedFan in Windows?
My motherboard is intelligent enough to be able to handle ramping up RPMs when necessary. What's the purpose of babysitting fan speeds? More on reddit.com
🌐 r/linuxquestions
9
4
October 19, 2018
🌐
Baeldung
baeldung.com β€Ί home β€Ί administration β€Ί controlling fan speed in linux
Controlling Fan Speed in Linux | Baeldung on Linux
3 weeks ago - In this tutorial, we’ll discuss ... temperature, fan speed, and voltage sensors. fancontrol is an lm-sensors utility that regulates fan speed according to system temperature....
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Debian
packages.debian.org β€Ί trixie β€Ί fancontrol
Debian -- Details of package fancontrol in trixie
This package contains a daemon that calculates fan speeds from temperatures and sets the corresponding PWM outputs to the computed values.
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Deye PV Balkonkraftwerk
libe.net β€Ί en β€Ί fan-control-debian
Fan control Linux Debian: Fancontrol
September 26, 2022 - The script tests the individual fans and can then assign them to a temperature sensor with corresponding threshold values: ... sudo pwmconfig # pwmconfig version 3.6.0 This program will search your sensors for pulse width modulation (pwm) controls, and test each one to see if it controls a fan on your motherboard.
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Debian Manpages
manpages.debian.org β€Ί testing β€Ί fancontrol β€Ί pwmconfig.8.en.html
pwmconfig(8) β€” fancontrol β€” Debian testing β€” Debian Manpages
It is strongly recommended to run pwmconfig at a time when there is no significant system load, to minimize the risk of overheating. pwmconfig searches your sensors for pulse width modulation (PWM) controls, and tests each one to see if it controls a fan on your motherboard.
Find elsewhere
🌐
Debian
packages.debian.org β€Ί bookworm β€Ί fancontrol
Debian -- Details of package fancontrol in bookworm
This package contains a daemon that calculates fan speeds from temperatures and sets the corresponding PWM outputs to the computed values.
🌐
Debian Manpages
manpages.debian.org β€Ί stretch β€Ί fancontrol β€Ί fancontrol(8)
fancontrol(8) β€” fancontrol β€” Debian stretch β€” Debian Manpages
It reads its configuration from a file, then calculates fan speeds from temperatures and sets the corresponding PWM outputs to the computed values.
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Debian
packages.debian.org β€Ί fancontrol
I Challenge Thee
I Challenge Thee Β· AI scrapers break the web, to use this page you'll need JavaScript enabled
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Linux Questions
linuxquestions.org β€Ί questions β€Ί linux-software-2 β€Ί looking-for-an-easy-to-use-fan-control-app-for-debian-12-a-4175733334
Looking for an easy to use fan control app for Debian 12
January 29, 2024 - Using Debian 12 and I'd like to know if there's an app out there (prefer a GUI ) that lets me see and EASILY control -all- fans attached to my system.
🌐
Debian Manpages
manpages.debian.org β€Ί fancontrol
fancontrol(8) β€” fancontrol β€” Debian trixie β€” Debian Manpages
It reads its configuration from a file, then calculates fan speeds from temperatures and sets the corresponding PWM outputs to the computed values.
🌐
Debian
packages.debian.org β€Ί buster β€Ί utils β€Ί fancontrol
Debian -- Details of package fancontrol in buster
October 15, 2022 - two or more packages specified (fancontrol buster) See our contact page to get in touch. Content Copyright Β© 1997 - 2026 SPI Inc.; See license terms. Debian is a trademark of SPI Inc. Learn more about this site.
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Reddit
reddit.com β€Ί r/debian β€Ί [help needed] fan control on headless linux server
r/debian on Reddit: [Help needed] Fan control on headless linux server
November 25, 2024 -

I just got myself an Intel Arc A380 for my home server that's going to be run a media server, self-hosted cloud store, etc. I am running the latest Debian (but I am open to switching distros, if justified).

My problem is that the GPU fans drive me nuts, as they keep spinning up and down constantly.
I've observed that they speed up when the GPU temps exceed 30Β°C, and go down once it is lower. My idle temps are between 28-31Β°C.

I would like to set up a custom curve (or at least some temperature points and values) via a terminal. I've read up on multiple threads and saw that there are solutions available for NVIDIA or AMD GPUs, but haven't found anything close to a solution on Intel. Does anyone know about anything that might help me? Thank you in advance.

🌐
Debian Manpages
manpages.debian.org β€Ί bullseye β€Ί fancontrol β€Ί fancontrol.8.en.html
fancontrol(8) β€” fancontrol β€” Debian bullseye β€” Debian Manpages
January 30, 2021 - It reads its configuration from a file, then calculates fan speeds from temperatures and sets the corresponding PWM outputs to the computed values.
🌐
Debian Manpages
manpages.debian.org β€Ί bookworm β€Ί fancontrol β€Ί fancontrol.8.en.html
fancontrol(8) β€” fancontrol β€” Debian bookworm β€” Debian Manpages
It reads its configuration from a file, then calculates fan speeds from temperatures and sets the corresponding PWM outputs to the computed values.
🌐
joeplaa wiki
wiki.joeplaa.com β€Ί tutorials β€Ί how-to-install-and-configure-fancontrol-pc
How to install and configure fancontrol (PC) | joeplaa wiki
Control (lower) fanspeeds on Ubuntu PC. On Ubuntu/Debian (Proxmox) this can be achieved by installing the lm-sensors package to read the CPU temperature data and fancontrol to control the fan speeds.
🌐
Linux.org
linux.org β€Ί home β€Ί forums β€Ί general linux forums β€Ί distribution specific β€Ί debian and derivatives
Fancontrol under Debian 11 | Linux.org
October 9, 2022 - The site (this one) kinda mangled that. Here's the URL I'd read: Open this link: reddit.com/r/archlinux/comments/udoura/fan_speed_control_acer_nitro_51545/ (That one shouldn't expand to show the post.) There are comments like "i selected the AN515-51 config and i can control my fans" which makes me think you can do it by manually selecting the fan control settings.
Top answer
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Note before starting:

This functionality depends on both your hardware and software. If your hardware doesn't support fan speed controls, or doesn't show them to the OS, it is very likely that you could not use this solution. If it does, but the software (aka kernel) doesn't know how to control it, you are without luck.


  1. Install the lm-sensors and fancontrol packages.

  2. Configure lm-sensors as follows:

    1. In terminal type sudo sensors-detect and answer YES to all YES/no questions.
      (Potentially, this can damage your system or cause system crash. For a lot of systems, it is safe. There is no guarantee that this process will not damage your system permanently, I just think that chance of such critical failure is really really low. Saving all your work for eventual crashes/freezes/restarts before handling system configuration is always good idea. If you feel unsure, read the comments and try to search a web and get some high-level overview before YES-ing everything, maybe being selective with your YES-es will still be enough)

    2. At the end of sensors-detect, a list of modules that need to be loaded will be displayed. Type "yes" to have sensors-detect insert those modules into /etc/modules, or edit /etc/modules yourself.

    3. Run sudo service kmod start This will read the changes you made to /etc/modules in step 2, and insert the new modules into the kernel.
      Note: If you're running Ubuntu 12.04 or lower, this 3rd step command should be replaced by sudo service module-init-tools restart

  3. Configure fancontrol

    1. In terminal type sudo pwmconfig . This script will stop each fan for 5 seconds to find out which fans can be controlled by which PWM handle. After script loops through all fans, you can configure which fan corresponds to which temperature.
    2. You will have to specify what sensors to use. This is a bit tricky. If you have just one fan, make sure to use a temperature sensor for your core to base the fancontrol speed on.
    3. Run through the prompts and save the changes to the default location.
    4. Make adjustments to fine-tune /etc/fancontrol and use sudo service fancontrol restart to apply your changes. (In my case I set interval to 2 seconds.)
  4. Set up fancontrol service

    1. Run sudo service fancontrol start. This will also make the fancontrol service run automatically at system startup.

In my case /etc/fancontrol for CPU I used:

Settings for hwmon0/device/pwm2:
(Depends on hwmon0/device/temp2_input) (Controls hwmon0/device/fan2_input)

INTERVAL=2
MINTEMP=40  
MAXTEMP=60  
MINSTART=150  
MINSTOP=0  
MINPWM=0  
MAXPWM=255 

and on a different system it is:

INTERVAL=10
DEVPATH=hwmon1=devices/platform/coretemp.0 hwmon2=devices/platform/nct6775.2608
DEVNAME=hwmon1=coretemp hwmon2=nct6779
FCTEMPS=hwmon2/pwm2=hwmon1/temp2_input
FCFANS=hwmon2/pwm2=hwmon2/fan2_input
MINTEMP=hwmon2/pwm2=49
MAXTEMP=hwmon2/pwm2=83
MINSTART=hwmon2/pwm2=150
MINSTOP=hwmon2/pwm2=15
MINPWM=hwmon2/pwm2=14
MAXPWM=hwmon2/pwm2=255

This man page gives some useful info on the settings and what they really do.

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63

If you own a ThinkPad, there's a piece of software called thinkfan that does exactly this. As the name obviously suggests, it is specifically made for ThinkPads (thinkpad_acpi).

The thinkfan software is available in the standard ubuntu software repositories, but it does require a few steps to configure.

Here is an easy step-by-step guide, which is basically a translated version of this German guide.

Relevant Information from Post

  1. Install the thinkfan software and the sensors:

    sudo apt-get install thinkfan lm-sensors
    
  2. Make sure that the daemon controls the fan by editing the thinkpad.conf file:

    sudo nano /etc/modprobe.d/thinkfan.conf
    

    by adding the following line:

    options thinkpad_acpi fan_control=1
    
  3. Make the daemon load automatically at start-up by editing the file:

    sudo nano /etc/default/thinkfan
    

    making sure that the START key is set to yes, i.e., there should be a line that says:

    START=yes
    
  4. Detect your laptop's sensors:

    sudo sensors-detect
    

    and just choose the default answers whenever you're prompted by hitting Enter.

  5. Load the new modules. From Ubuntu 13.10 this done by:

    sudo service kmod start
    

    while for previous versions like 13.04 you instead will need to do:

    sudo service module-init-tools start
    
  6. Figure out which sensors are in use:

    sensors
    

    (the ones that indicate 0 degrees are not in use, I don't know why those are "detected" too). Remember which ones are in use.

  7. Find out the full paths of these sensors:

    find /sys/devices -type f -name "temp*_input"
    

    The output should be a list of paths like /sys/devices/...

  8. Copy-paste the paths to the sensors into the configuration file /etc/thinkpad.conf. To do this, first open up the file:

    sudo nano /etc/thinkfan.conf
    

    There should already be a line like

    #sensor /proc/acpi/ibm/thermal (0, 10, 15, 2, 10, 5, 0, 3, 0, 3) 
    

    (the #-symbol means that that line is commented out). Add a line starting with sensor (without the #-symbol) and copy-paste you first sensor. Repeat this if you have more than one sensor. For example, on my machine, the output in step 7 yields

    /sys/devices/virtual/hwmon/hwmon0/temp1_input
    /sys/devices/platform/thinkpad_hwmon/temp3_input
    /sys/devices/platform/thinkpad_hwmon/temp4_input
    /sys/devices/platform/thinkpad_hwmon/temp5_input
    /sys/devices/platform/thinkpad_hwmon/temp6_input
    /sys/devices/platform/thinkpad_hwmon/temp7_input
    /sys/devices/platform/thinkpad_hwmon/temp1_input
    /sys/devices/platform/thinkpad_hwmon/temp8_input
    /sys/devices/platform/thinkpad_hwmon/temp2_input
    /sys/devices/platform/coretemp.0/temp4_input
    /sys/devices/platform/coretemp.0/temp2_input 
    

    The ones that are in use in my machine are the ones in the first and the last two lines, so I added the three lines:

    sensor /sys/devices/virtual/hwmon/hwmon0/temp1_input
    sensor /sys/devices/platform/coretemp.0/temp4_input
    sensor /sys/devices/platform/coretemp.0/temp2_input 
    
  9. Finally, we can set the fan speed levels in the configuration file. Open the /etc/thinkpad.conf file if it wasn't open already.

    sudo nano /etc/thinkfan.conf
    

    The fan levels I use on my ThinkPad x201 are:

    (0, 0, 51)
    (1, 50, 52)
    (2, 51, 55)
    (3, 54, 58)
    (4, 56, 63)
    (5, 60, 70)
    (6, 66, 79)
    (7, 74, 92)
    (127, 85, 32767) 
    

    The last line ensures full fan speed (127 = "disengaged" i.e. unregulated). You can fiddle with these levels to fit your needs/wishes, but PLEASE BE CAREFUL!

  10. Reboot. Everything should work now. In order to check whether thinkpad is running correctly, use:

    sudo thinkfan -n
    

    Which starts thinkfan in verbose mode. You might want to stop the thinkfan daemon first:

    sudo /etc/init.d/thinkfan stop
    

    If you want to start the thinkfan daemon again, type:

    sudo /etc/init.d/thinkfan start
    

Just to be complete, my /etc/thinkfan.conf configuration file is:

# IMPORTANT:
#
# To keep your HD from overheating, you have to specify a correction value for
# the sensor that has the HD's temperature. You need to do this because
# thinkfan uses only the highest temperature it can find in the system, and
# that'll most likely never be your HD, as most HDs are already out of spec
# when they reach 55 Β°C.
# Correction values are applied from left to right in the same order as the
# temperatures are read from the file.
#
# For example:
# sensor /proc/acpi/ibm/thermal (0, 0, 10)
# will add a fixed value of 10 Β°C the 3rd value read from that file. Check out
# http://www.thinkwiki.org/wiki/Thermal_Sensors to find out how much you may
# want to add to certain temperatures.

# Syntax:
# (LEVEL, LOW, HIGH)
# LEVEL is the fan level to use (0-7 with thinkpad_acpi)
# LOW is the temperature at which to step down to the previous level
# HIGH is the temperature at which to step up to the next level
# All numbers are integers.
#

# I use this on my T61p:
#sensor /proc/acpi/ibm/thermal (0, 10, 15, 2, 10, 5, 0, 3, 0, 3)

#(0, 0, 55)
#(1, 48, 60)
#(2, 50, 61)
#(3, 52, 63)
#(4, 56, 65)
#(5, 59, 66)
#(7, 63, 32767)


# My settings for my ThinkPad X201: (kris)

sensor /sys/devices/virtual/hwmon/hwmon0/temp1_input
sensor /sys/devices/platform/coretemp.0/temp4_input
sensor /sys/devices/platform/coretemp.0/temp2_input

(0, 0, 51)
(1, 50, 52)
(2, 51, 55)
(3, 54, 58)
(4, 56, 63)
(5, 60, 70)
(6, 66, 79)
(7, 74, 92)
(127, 85, 32767)