Provided by: thinkfan_0.9.2-1_amd64 bug

NAME

       thinkfan - A simple fan control program

SYNOPSIS

       thinkfan [-hnqzDd] [-b BIAS] [-c CONFIG] [-s SECONDS] [-p [DELAY]]

DESCRIPTION

       Thinkfan   sets   the   fan   speed  according  to  temperature  limits  preconfigured  in
       /etc/thinkfan.conf. It can read temperatures from three possible sources:

       /proc/acpi/ibm/thermal
              Which is provided by the thinkpad_acpi kernel module,

       /sys/class/hwmon/*/temp*_input
              Which may be provided by any hwmon drivers, and

       S.M.A.R.T. (since 0.9)
              Which reads the temperature directly from the hard disk using libatasmart.

       Note that since 0.9 you can use any sensors of these three types  at  the  same  time.  To
       allow  that,  the  configuration  keywords  have been changed. The sensor keyword has been
       deprecated in favor of the new keywords tp_thermal, hwmon  and  atasmart  which  mark  the
       following  path  as  a legacy thinkpad_acpi thermal file, sysfs hwmon file, or a hard disk
       device file, respectively.

       The fan can be /proc/acpi/ibm/fan or some PWM file in /sys/class/hwmon. Note that the  fan
       config  keyword  is  deprecated  as  well.  Instead,  you  should  use tp_fan for a legacy
       thinkpad_acpi fan file or pwm_fan for a sysfs PWM file.

       See the README file and the example configurations for details on these changes.

       WARNING: This program does only very basic sanity  checking  on  the  configuration.  That
              means that you can set your temperature limits as insane as you like.

       There are two general modes of operation:

   COMPLEX MODE
       In  complex  mode,  temperature  limits  are defined for each sensor thinkfan knows about.
       Setting suitable limits for each sensor in your system will  probably  require  a  bit  of
       experimentation and good knowledge about your hardware, but it's the safest way of keeping
       each     component     within     its      specified      temperature      range.      See
       http://www.thinkwiki.org/wiki/Thermal_Sensors  for  details  on which sensor measures what
       temperature in a Thinkpad. On other systems you'll have to find out on your own.  See  the
       example configs to learn about the syntax.

   SIMPLE MODE
       In  simple  mode, Thinkfan uses only the highest temperature found in the system. That may
       be dangerous, e.g. for hard disks.  That's why you should provide a correction value (i.e.
       add  10-15  \[u00B0]C)  for  the  sensor  that  has  the temperature of your hard disk (or
       battery...). See the example config files for details about that.

CONFIGURATION

       Some  example  configurations  are  provided  with  the  source  package.   For   detailed
       explanations  please  read  the README file. If you installed thinkfan from a distribution
       package, you may find them under /usr/share/doc or  wherever  your  package  manager  puts
       documentation.

OPTIONS

       -h     Show a short help message

       -s SECONDS
              Maximum seconds between temperature updates (default: 5)

       -b BIAS
              Floating  point  number (-10 to 30) to control rising temperature exaggeration.  If
              the temperature increases by more than 2 °C during one cycle, this number  is  used
              to  calculate a bias, which is added to the current highest temperature seen in the
              system:

               current_tmax = current_tmax + delta_t * BIAS / 10

              This means that negative  numbers  can  be  used  to  even  out  short  and  sudden
              temperature  spikes  like  those seen on some on-DIE sensors. Use DANGEROUS mode to
              remove the -10 to +30 limit. Note that you can't have a  space  between  -b  and  a
              negative  argument,  because  otherwise getopt will interpret things like -10 as an
              option and fail (i.e. write "-b-10" instead of "-b -10").

              Default is 15.0

       -c FILE
              Load a different configuration file (default: /etc/thinkfan.conf)

       -n     Do not become a daemon and log to terminal instead of syslog

       -q     Be quiet (no status info on terminal)

       -z     Assume we don't have to worry about resuming from  standby  when  using  the  sysfs
              interface (see README!)

       -p [SECONDS]
              Use   the   pulsing-fan   workaround  (for  older  Thinkpads).  Takes  an  optional
              floating-point argument (0-10s) as depulsing duration. Default 0.5s.

       -d     Do not read temperature from sleeping disks. Instead, 0 °C is used as  that  disk's
              temperature.  This is needed if reading the temperature causes your disk to wake up
              unnecessarily.  Note: This option is only available if thinkfan was built  with  -D
              USE_ATASMART.

       -D     DANGEROUS mode: Disable all sanity checks. May damage your hardware!!

SIGNALS

       SIGINT  and  SIGTERM  simply  interrupt  operation  and should cause thinkfan to terminate
       cleanly.

       SIGHUP makes thinkfan reload its config. If there's any problem with the  new  config,  we
       keep the old one.

       SIGUSR1  causes  thinkfan to dump all currently known temperatures either to syslog, or to
       the console (if running with the -n option).

SEE ALSO

       git://git.code.sf.net/p/thinkfan/code

BUGS

       If you have any problems with thinkfan, please go to the help forum at sf.net:
       http://sourceforge.net/projects/thinkfan/forums/forum/905019.

       There's a bugtracker at
       http://sourceforge.net/tracker/?group_id=249873&atid=2416828.