Fan working non-stop on Ubuntu 18.04











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I'm running a fresh Ubuntu 18.04 installation. I have an issue with my fan, which is working non-stop. The CPU seems OK. My previous version of Ubuntu (16.04) did not have such a problem.



How do I find the source of this problem?










share|improve this question
























  • What make and model is your laptop? Do you still have 16.04 on another partition or did you wipe it out for the fresh 18.04 install?
    – WinEunuuchs2Unix
    May 7 at 4:01















up vote
6
down vote

favorite
2












I'm running a fresh Ubuntu 18.04 installation. I have an issue with my fan, which is working non-stop. The CPU seems OK. My previous version of Ubuntu (16.04) did not have such a problem.



How do I find the source of this problem?










share|improve this question
























  • What make and model is your laptop? Do you still have 16.04 on another partition or did you wipe it out for the fresh 18.04 install?
    – WinEunuuchs2Unix
    May 7 at 4:01













up vote
6
down vote

favorite
2









up vote
6
down vote

favorite
2






2





I'm running a fresh Ubuntu 18.04 installation. I have an issue with my fan, which is working non-stop. The CPU seems OK. My previous version of Ubuntu (16.04) did not have such a problem.



How do I find the source of this problem?










share|improve this question















I'm running a fresh Ubuntu 18.04 installation. I have an issue with my fan, which is working non-stop. The CPU seems OK. My previous version of Ubuntu (16.04) did not have such a problem.



How do I find the source of this problem?







fan






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited May 7 at 3:45









ubashu

2,28221836




2,28221836










asked Apr 27 at 23:55









Stockfish

9627




9627












  • What make and model is your laptop? Do you still have 16.04 on another partition or did you wipe it out for the fresh 18.04 install?
    – WinEunuuchs2Unix
    May 7 at 4:01


















  • What make and model is your laptop? Do you still have 16.04 on another partition or did you wipe it out for the fresh 18.04 install?
    – WinEunuuchs2Unix
    May 7 at 4:01
















What make and model is your laptop? Do you still have 16.04 on another partition or did you wipe it out for the fresh 18.04 install?
– WinEunuuchs2Unix
May 7 at 4:01




What make and model is your laptop? Do you still have 16.04 on another partition or did you wipe it out for the fresh 18.04 install?
– WinEunuuchs2Unix
May 7 at 4:01










7 Answers
7






active

oldest

votes

















up vote
4
down vote













You may install tlp app from its ppa source and cpufreqd and indicator-cpufreq.

It's possible it will be enough to solve the problem.



Trying kernels via ukuu app may solve some issues about power usage.



Note: It was experienced the same issue upgrading to 17.xx and now again with the 18.04 which is weird as the kernels seem to be more and more efficient in the power management.






share|improve this answer























  • Hi, can you edit your post adding the links to tlp and ukuu?
    – Hastur
    May 7 at 10:31






  • 1




    I think tlp is the right way! I had the same problem on Kubuntu 18.04 and tlp did the trick. For more info: askubuntu.com/questions/516067/…
    – Claudio Taccogna
    May 11 at 5:36




















up vote
3
down vote













Posts by TomFreudenberg on github were very helpful. i8kutils is working like a champ on Dell Inspiron laptop but was hard to find a single procedure to get installed and configured for a Dell WITH bios fan control disabling. These are my detailed steps and machine:




  • Ubuntu 18.04 Bionic Beaver

  • Laptop: Dell Inspiron 7000 series (7737)

  • CPU: Intel® Core™ i7-4510U CPU @ 2.00GHz × 4


My solution steps (fans immediately shut off on last step):



(1) Download .zip file to disable bios fan control for Dell laptops from:
https://github.com/TomFreudenberg/dell-bios-fan-control



(2) Then, as root:




  • cd Downloads


  • unzip -t dell-bios-fan-control-master.zip (test zipfile; everything looked fine, so unzip files...)

  • unzip dell-bios-fan-control-master.zip

  • cd dell-bios-fan-control-master/


  • more Makefile (look what it's going to do; looks fine, so compile with...)

  • make


(3) Compiled fine, so:





  • ./dell-bios-fan-control 0 (turn off dell bios fan control)

  • BIOS CONTROL DISABLED


(4) Fan was still idling around 2500rpm. Hmmm.. recalled post indicating uninstall then reinstall i8kutils with the same /etc/i8kutils.conf config file.



(5) Uninstalled and reinstalled i8kutils with:




  • apt-get remove i8kutils

  • apt-get install i8kutils


(6) Fan immediately stopped upon reinstalling i8kutils.



Looks like it's working. Fan turns on properly when cpu temp hits 55C then turns off quickly because fan came on at the high setting.



Will continue to monitor temperature and fan states with 'sensors' to ensure all is working as configured in /etc/i8kutils.conf.



Thanks for the pointers and code. This is the only solution that worked for me.



tlp did nothing but that may be because bios was controlling the fans.






share|improve this answer






























    up vote
    1
    down vote













    I recently bought a new Dell Precision 3520 that came installed with 16.04. I upgraded to 17.10 and the cpu fan was working fine. It only came on intermittently, only when required.



    Then I upgraded to 18.04 a few days ago. Initially I didn't notice anything odd about the cpu fan. Then a day or so later I noticed that the fan was running more than usual. I also noticed that the battery life also went down faster than what I was normally used to seeing.



    The CPU I have, i7 7700HQ, runs between 2.8 GHz and 3.8 GHz in Turbo mode. I was keeping an eye on the cpu frequency and temperature using cpufreq-info and sensors. After upgrading to 18.04 I saw that the cpu was running at 3.8 GHz even though I wasn't running any applications. So, I went into the BIOS settings and disabled the Turbo mode. This seems to have solved my issue. I'm also running the cpufreq governor on powersave. Hope this helps.






    share|improve this answer




























      up vote
      1
      down vote













      I had the same issue on a new DELL XPS 9560 Laptop - non stop fans.



      For me it was the SMBIOS control of my Dell. When enabled (default), all i8kctl settings will be overwritten by SMBIOS control.



      With help from others, I posted this project on github: https://github.com/TomFreudenberg/dell-bios-fan-control



      This small tool allows to disable SMBIOS controls on Dell XPS 9560 so that i8kmon will work.



      Maybe its sense-full to some others as well.



      Cheers






      share|improve this answer




























        up vote
        0
        down vote













        Had same problem, fan was working not stop. I discovered that cpu was always at max frequnecy. Intel pstate enabled and powersave governor selected.



        cpupower frequency-info
        analyzing CPU 0:
        driver: intel_pstate
        CPUs which run at the same hardware frequency: 0
        CPUs which need to have their frequency coordinated by software: 0
        maximum transition latency: Cannot determine or is not supported.
        hardware limits: 800 MHz - 3.80 GHz
        current policy: frequency should be within 3.80 GHz and 3.80 GHz.
        The governor "powersave" may decide which speed to use
        within this range.


        For some unknown reason CPU min and max frequnecy was 3.80GHz. I used https://github.com/pyamsoft/pstate-frequency tool to set powersave governor and this time correct values for CPU minimum and maximum frequencies was set. CPU temp dropped few degrees and battery life is over 7 hours again(was ~3-4 hours). First time after installing 18.04, fan stopped working. (Dell XPS 9560, i7-7700HQ)






        share|improve this answer





















        • Hi henri17, can you give some more information about the cpupower command, as well as your kernel version? It looks like cpupower is provided by linux-tools-common, but you need to install a version that's specific to your kernel.
          – Emily
          May 7 at 15:58










        • I have : 4.15.0-20-generic #21-Ubuntu SMP Tue Apr 24 06:16:15 UTC 2018 x86_64 x86_64 x86_64 GNU/Linux cpupower 4.15.17
          – henri17
          May 9 at 12:56




















        up vote
        0
        down vote













        try my personal solution. It's working fine on a Dell Inspiron 3521 15R Intel i3 CPU on Kubuntu 18.04.



        Persistent High-Fan Speed Ubuntu 14.04






        share|improve this answer




























          up vote
          0
          down vote













          If you are using a Dell Inspiron 3521 please see my blog fixing-constantly-running-fans-on-dell-laptops for ubuntu 16.04, if Ubuntu 18.04 still uses the same kernel module dell-smm-hwmon as in ubuntu 16.04 this should still be valid.






          share|improve this answer





















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            7 Answers
            7






            active

            oldest

            votes








            7 Answers
            7






            active

            oldest

            votes









            active

            oldest

            votes






            active

            oldest

            votes








            up vote
            4
            down vote













            You may install tlp app from its ppa source and cpufreqd and indicator-cpufreq.

            It's possible it will be enough to solve the problem.



            Trying kernels via ukuu app may solve some issues about power usage.



            Note: It was experienced the same issue upgrading to 17.xx and now again with the 18.04 which is weird as the kernels seem to be more and more efficient in the power management.






            share|improve this answer























            • Hi, can you edit your post adding the links to tlp and ukuu?
              – Hastur
              May 7 at 10:31






            • 1




              I think tlp is the right way! I had the same problem on Kubuntu 18.04 and tlp did the trick. For more info: askubuntu.com/questions/516067/…
              – Claudio Taccogna
              May 11 at 5:36

















            up vote
            4
            down vote













            You may install tlp app from its ppa source and cpufreqd and indicator-cpufreq.

            It's possible it will be enough to solve the problem.



            Trying kernels via ukuu app may solve some issues about power usage.



            Note: It was experienced the same issue upgrading to 17.xx and now again with the 18.04 which is weird as the kernels seem to be more and more efficient in the power management.






            share|improve this answer























            • Hi, can you edit your post adding the links to tlp and ukuu?
              – Hastur
              May 7 at 10:31






            • 1




              I think tlp is the right way! I had the same problem on Kubuntu 18.04 and tlp did the trick. For more info: askubuntu.com/questions/516067/…
              – Claudio Taccogna
              May 11 at 5:36















            up vote
            4
            down vote










            up vote
            4
            down vote









            You may install tlp app from its ppa source and cpufreqd and indicator-cpufreq.

            It's possible it will be enough to solve the problem.



            Trying kernels via ukuu app may solve some issues about power usage.



            Note: It was experienced the same issue upgrading to 17.xx and now again with the 18.04 which is weird as the kernels seem to be more and more efficient in the power management.






            share|improve this answer














            You may install tlp app from its ppa source and cpufreqd and indicator-cpufreq.

            It's possible it will be enough to solve the problem.



            Trying kernels via ukuu app may solve some issues about power usage.



            Note: It was experienced the same issue upgrading to 17.xx and now again with the 18.04 which is weird as the kernels seem to be more and more efficient in the power management.







            share|improve this answer














            share|improve this answer



            share|improve this answer








            edited May 7 at 10:30









            Hastur

            2,67011731




            2,67011731










            answered May 1 at 13:15









            PawełG

            1327




            1327












            • Hi, can you edit your post adding the links to tlp and ukuu?
              – Hastur
              May 7 at 10:31






            • 1




              I think tlp is the right way! I had the same problem on Kubuntu 18.04 and tlp did the trick. For more info: askubuntu.com/questions/516067/…
              – Claudio Taccogna
              May 11 at 5:36




















            • Hi, can you edit your post adding the links to tlp and ukuu?
              – Hastur
              May 7 at 10:31






            • 1




              I think tlp is the right way! I had the same problem on Kubuntu 18.04 and tlp did the trick. For more info: askubuntu.com/questions/516067/…
              – Claudio Taccogna
              May 11 at 5:36


















            Hi, can you edit your post adding the links to tlp and ukuu?
            – Hastur
            May 7 at 10:31




            Hi, can you edit your post adding the links to tlp and ukuu?
            – Hastur
            May 7 at 10:31




            1




            1




            I think tlp is the right way! I had the same problem on Kubuntu 18.04 and tlp did the trick. For more info: askubuntu.com/questions/516067/…
            – Claudio Taccogna
            May 11 at 5:36






            I think tlp is the right way! I had the same problem on Kubuntu 18.04 and tlp did the trick. For more info: askubuntu.com/questions/516067/…
            – Claudio Taccogna
            May 11 at 5:36














            up vote
            3
            down vote













            Posts by TomFreudenberg on github were very helpful. i8kutils is working like a champ on Dell Inspiron laptop but was hard to find a single procedure to get installed and configured for a Dell WITH bios fan control disabling. These are my detailed steps and machine:




            • Ubuntu 18.04 Bionic Beaver

            • Laptop: Dell Inspiron 7000 series (7737)

            • CPU: Intel® Core™ i7-4510U CPU @ 2.00GHz × 4


            My solution steps (fans immediately shut off on last step):



            (1) Download .zip file to disable bios fan control for Dell laptops from:
            https://github.com/TomFreudenberg/dell-bios-fan-control



            (2) Then, as root:




            • cd Downloads


            • unzip -t dell-bios-fan-control-master.zip (test zipfile; everything looked fine, so unzip files...)

            • unzip dell-bios-fan-control-master.zip

            • cd dell-bios-fan-control-master/


            • more Makefile (look what it's going to do; looks fine, so compile with...)

            • make


            (3) Compiled fine, so:





            • ./dell-bios-fan-control 0 (turn off dell bios fan control)

            • BIOS CONTROL DISABLED


            (4) Fan was still idling around 2500rpm. Hmmm.. recalled post indicating uninstall then reinstall i8kutils with the same /etc/i8kutils.conf config file.



            (5) Uninstalled and reinstalled i8kutils with:




            • apt-get remove i8kutils

            • apt-get install i8kutils


            (6) Fan immediately stopped upon reinstalling i8kutils.



            Looks like it's working. Fan turns on properly when cpu temp hits 55C then turns off quickly because fan came on at the high setting.



            Will continue to monitor temperature and fan states with 'sensors' to ensure all is working as configured in /etc/i8kutils.conf.



            Thanks for the pointers and code. This is the only solution that worked for me.



            tlp did nothing but that may be because bios was controlling the fans.






            share|improve this answer



























              up vote
              3
              down vote













              Posts by TomFreudenberg on github were very helpful. i8kutils is working like a champ on Dell Inspiron laptop but was hard to find a single procedure to get installed and configured for a Dell WITH bios fan control disabling. These are my detailed steps and machine:




              • Ubuntu 18.04 Bionic Beaver

              • Laptop: Dell Inspiron 7000 series (7737)

              • CPU: Intel® Core™ i7-4510U CPU @ 2.00GHz × 4


              My solution steps (fans immediately shut off on last step):



              (1) Download .zip file to disable bios fan control for Dell laptops from:
              https://github.com/TomFreudenberg/dell-bios-fan-control



              (2) Then, as root:




              • cd Downloads


              • unzip -t dell-bios-fan-control-master.zip (test zipfile; everything looked fine, so unzip files...)

              • unzip dell-bios-fan-control-master.zip

              • cd dell-bios-fan-control-master/


              • more Makefile (look what it's going to do; looks fine, so compile with...)

              • make


              (3) Compiled fine, so:





              • ./dell-bios-fan-control 0 (turn off dell bios fan control)

              • BIOS CONTROL DISABLED


              (4) Fan was still idling around 2500rpm. Hmmm.. recalled post indicating uninstall then reinstall i8kutils with the same /etc/i8kutils.conf config file.



              (5) Uninstalled and reinstalled i8kutils with:




              • apt-get remove i8kutils

              • apt-get install i8kutils


              (6) Fan immediately stopped upon reinstalling i8kutils.



              Looks like it's working. Fan turns on properly when cpu temp hits 55C then turns off quickly because fan came on at the high setting.



              Will continue to monitor temperature and fan states with 'sensors' to ensure all is working as configured in /etc/i8kutils.conf.



              Thanks for the pointers and code. This is the only solution that worked for me.



              tlp did nothing but that may be because bios was controlling the fans.






              share|improve this answer

























                up vote
                3
                down vote










                up vote
                3
                down vote









                Posts by TomFreudenberg on github were very helpful. i8kutils is working like a champ on Dell Inspiron laptop but was hard to find a single procedure to get installed and configured for a Dell WITH bios fan control disabling. These are my detailed steps and machine:




                • Ubuntu 18.04 Bionic Beaver

                • Laptop: Dell Inspiron 7000 series (7737)

                • CPU: Intel® Core™ i7-4510U CPU @ 2.00GHz × 4


                My solution steps (fans immediately shut off on last step):



                (1) Download .zip file to disable bios fan control for Dell laptops from:
                https://github.com/TomFreudenberg/dell-bios-fan-control



                (2) Then, as root:




                • cd Downloads


                • unzip -t dell-bios-fan-control-master.zip (test zipfile; everything looked fine, so unzip files...)

                • unzip dell-bios-fan-control-master.zip

                • cd dell-bios-fan-control-master/


                • more Makefile (look what it's going to do; looks fine, so compile with...)

                • make


                (3) Compiled fine, so:





                • ./dell-bios-fan-control 0 (turn off dell bios fan control)

                • BIOS CONTROL DISABLED


                (4) Fan was still idling around 2500rpm. Hmmm.. recalled post indicating uninstall then reinstall i8kutils with the same /etc/i8kutils.conf config file.



                (5) Uninstalled and reinstalled i8kutils with:




                • apt-get remove i8kutils

                • apt-get install i8kutils


                (6) Fan immediately stopped upon reinstalling i8kutils.



                Looks like it's working. Fan turns on properly when cpu temp hits 55C then turns off quickly because fan came on at the high setting.



                Will continue to monitor temperature and fan states with 'sensors' to ensure all is working as configured in /etc/i8kutils.conf.



                Thanks for the pointers and code. This is the only solution that worked for me.



                tlp did nothing but that may be because bios was controlling the fans.






                share|improve this answer














                Posts by TomFreudenberg on github were very helpful. i8kutils is working like a champ on Dell Inspiron laptop but was hard to find a single procedure to get installed and configured for a Dell WITH bios fan control disabling. These are my detailed steps and machine:




                • Ubuntu 18.04 Bionic Beaver

                • Laptop: Dell Inspiron 7000 series (7737)

                • CPU: Intel® Core™ i7-4510U CPU @ 2.00GHz × 4


                My solution steps (fans immediately shut off on last step):



                (1) Download .zip file to disable bios fan control for Dell laptops from:
                https://github.com/TomFreudenberg/dell-bios-fan-control



                (2) Then, as root:




                • cd Downloads


                • unzip -t dell-bios-fan-control-master.zip (test zipfile; everything looked fine, so unzip files...)

                • unzip dell-bios-fan-control-master.zip

                • cd dell-bios-fan-control-master/


                • more Makefile (look what it's going to do; looks fine, so compile with...)

                • make


                (3) Compiled fine, so:





                • ./dell-bios-fan-control 0 (turn off dell bios fan control)

                • BIOS CONTROL DISABLED


                (4) Fan was still idling around 2500rpm. Hmmm.. recalled post indicating uninstall then reinstall i8kutils with the same /etc/i8kutils.conf config file.



                (5) Uninstalled and reinstalled i8kutils with:




                • apt-get remove i8kutils

                • apt-get install i8kutils


                (6) Fan immediately stopped upon reinstalling i8kutils.



                Looks like it's working. Fan turns on properly when cpu temp hits 55C then turns off quickly because fan came on at the high setting.



                Will continue to monitor temperature and fan states with 'sensors' to ensure all is working as configured in /etc/i8kutils.conf.



                Thanks for the pointers and code. This is the only solution that worked for me.



                tlp did nothing but that may be because bios was controlling the fans.







                share|improve this answer














                share|improve this answer



                share|improve this answer








                edited Aug 7 at 21:59

























                answered Aug 7 at 13:27









                Marc Compere

                613




                613






















                    up vote
                    1
                    down vote













                    I recently bought a new Dell Precision 3520 that came installed with 16.04. I upgraded to 17.10 and the cpu fan was working fine. It only came on intermittently, only when required.



                    Then I upgraded to 18.04 a few days ago. Initially I didn't notice anything odd about the cpu fan. Then a day or so later I noticed that the fan was running more than usual. I also noticed that the battery life also went down faster than what I was normally used to seeing.



                    The CPU I have, i7 7700HQ, runs between 2.8 GHz and 3.8 GHz in Turbo mode. I was keeping an eye on the cpu frequency and temperature using cpufreq-info and sensors. After upgrading to 18.04 I saw that the cpu was running at 3.8 GHz even though I wasn't running any applications. So, I went into the BIOS settings and disabled the Turbo mode. This seems to have solved my issue. I'm also running the cpufreq governor on powersave. Hope this helps.






                    share|improve this answer

























                      up vote
                      1
                      down vote













                      I recently bought a new Dell Precision 3520 that came installed with 16.04. I upgraded to 17.10 and the cpu fan was working fine. It only came on intermittently, only when required.



                      Then I upgraded to 18.04 a few days ago. Initially I didn't notice anything odd about the cpu fan. Then a day or so later I noticed that the fan was running more than usual. I also noticed that the battery life also went down faster than what I was normally used to seeing.



                      The CPU I have, i7 7700HQ, runs between 2.8 GHz and 3.8 GHz in Turbo mode. I was keeping an eye on the cpu frequency and temperature using cpufreq-info and sensors. After upgrading to 18.04 I saw that the cpu was running at 3.8 GHz even though I wasn't running any applications. So, I went into the BIOS settings and disabled the Turbo mode. This seems to have solved my issue. I'm also running the cpufreq governor on powersave. Hope this helps.






                      share|improve this answer























                        up vote
                        1
                        down vote










                        up vote
                        1
                        down vote









                        I recently bought a new Dell Precision 3520 that came installed with 16.04. I upgraded to 17.10 and the cpu fan was working fine. It only came on intermittently, only when required.



                        Then I upgraded to 18.04 a few days ago. Initially I didn't notice anything odd about the cpu fan. Then a day or so later I noticed that the fan was running more than usual. I also noticed that the battery life also went down faster than what I was normally used to seeing.



                        The CPU I have, i7 7700HQ, runs between 2.8 GHz and 3.8 GHz in Turbo mode. I was keeping an eye on the cpu frequency and temperature using cpufreq-info and sensors. After upgrading to 18.04 I saw that the cpu was running at 3.8 GHz even though I wasn't running any applications. So, I went into the BIOS settings and disabled the Turbo mode. This seems to have solved my issue. I'm also running the cpufreq governor on powersave. Hope this helps.






                        share|improve this answer












                        I recently bought a new Dell Precision 3520 that came installed with 16.04. I upgraded to 17.10 and the cpu fan was working fine. It only came on intermittently, only when required.



                        Then I upgraded to 18.04 a few days ago. Initially I didn't notice anything odd about the cpu fan. Then a day or so later I noticed that the fan was running more than usual. I also noticed that the battery life also went down faster than what I was normally used to seeing.



                        The CPU I have, i7 7700HQ, runs between 2.8 GHz and 3.8 GHz in Turbo mode. I was keeping an eye on the cpu frequency and temperature using cpufreq-info and sensors. After upgrading to 18.04 I saw that the cpu was running at 3.8 GHz even though I wasn't running any applications. So, I went into the BIOS settings and disabled the Turbo mode. This seems to have solved my issue. I'm also running the cpufreq governor on powersave. Hope this helps.







                        share|improve this answer












                        share|improve this answer



                        share|improve this answer










                        answered May 6 at 22:26









                        Rahul

                        112




                        112






















                            up vote
                            1
                            down vote













                            I had the same issue on a new DELL XPS 9560 Laptop - non stop fans.



                            For me it was the SMBIOS control of my Dell. When enabled (default), all i8kctl settings will be overwritten by SMBIOS control.



                            With help from others, I posted this project on github: https://github.com/TomFreudenberg/dell-bios-fan-control



                            This small tool allows to disable SMBIOS controls on Dell XPS 9560 so that i8kmon will work.



                            Maybe its sense-full to some others as well.



                            Cheers






                            share|improve this answer

























                              up vote
                              1
                              down vote













                              I had the same issue on a new DELL XPS 9560 Laptop - non stop fans.



                              For me it was the SMBIOS control of my Dell. When enabled (default), all i8kctl settings will be overwritten by SMBIOS control.



                              With help from others, I posted this project on github: https://github.com/TomFreudenberg/dell-bios-fan-control



                              This small tool allows to disable SMBIOS controls on Dell XPS 9560 so that i8kmon will work.



                              Maybe its sense-full to some others as well.



                              Cheers






                              share|improve this answer























                                up vote
                                1
                                down vote










                                up vote
                                1
                                down vote









                                I had the same issue on a new DELL XPS 9560 Laptop - non stop fans.



                                For me it was the SMBIOS control of my Dell. When enabled (default), all i8kctl settings will be overwritten by SMBIOS control.



                                With help from others, I posted this project on github: https://github.com/TomFreudenberg/dell-bios-fan-control



                                This small tool allows to disable SMBIOS controls on Dell XPS 9560 so that i8kmon will work.



                                Maybe its sense-full to some others as well.



                                Cheers






                                share|improve this answer












                                I had the same issue on a new DELL XPS 9560 Laptop - non stop fans.



                                For me it was the SMBIOS control of my Dell. When enabled (default), all i8kctl settings will be overwritten by SMBIOS control.



                                With help from others, I posted this project on github: https://github.com/TomFreudenberg/dell-bios-fan-control



                                This small tool allows to disable SMBIOS controls on Dell XPS 9560 so that i8kmon will work.



                                Maybe its sense-full to some others as well.



                                Cheers







                                share|improve this answer












                                share|improve this answer



                                share|improve this answer










                                answered May 21 at 13:01









                                Tom Freudenberg

                                1213




                                1213






















                                    up vote
                                    0
                                    down vote













                                    Had same problem, fan was working not stop. I discovered that cpu was always at max frequnecy. Intel pstate enabled and powersave governor selected.



                                    cpupower frequency-info
                                    analyzing CPU 0:
                                    driver: intel_pstate
                                    CPUs which run at the same hardware frequency: 0
                                    CPUs which need to have their frequency coordinated by software: 0
                                    maximum transition latency: Cannot determine or is not supported.
                                    hardware limits: 800 MHz - 3.80 GHz
                                    current policy: frequency should be within 3.80 GHz and 3.80 GHz.
                                    The governor "powersave" may decide which speed to use
                                    within this range.


                                    For some unknown reason CPU min and max frequnecy was 3.80GHz. I used https://github.com/pyamsoft/pstate-frequency tool to set powersave governor and this time correct values for CPU minimum and maximum frequencies was set. CPU temp dropped few degrees and battery life is over 7 hours again(was ~3-4 hours). First time after installing 18.04, fan stopped working. (Dell XPS 9560, i7-7700HQ)






                                    share|improve this answer





















                                    • Hi henri17, can you give some more information about the cpupower command, as well as your kernel version? It looks like cpupower is provided by linux-tools-common, but you need to install a version that's specific to your kernel.
                                      – Emily
                                      May 7 at 15:58










                                    • I have : 4.15.0-20-generic #21-Ubuntu SMP Tue Apr 24 06:16:15 UTC 2018 x86_64 x86_64 x86_64 GNU/Linux cpupower 4.15.17
                                      – henri17
                                      May 9 at 12:56

















                                    up vote
                                    0
                                    down vote













                                    Had same problem, fan was working not stop. I discovered that cpu was always at max frequnecy. Intel pstate enabled and powersave governor selected.



                                    cpupower frequency-info
                                    analyzing CPU 0:
                                    driver: intel_pstate
                                    CPUs which run at the same hardware frequency: 0
                                    CPUs which need to have their frequency coordinated by software: 0
                                    maximum transition latency: Cannot determine or is not supported.
                                    hardware limits: 800 MHz - 3.80 GHz
                                    current policy: frequency should be within 3.80 GHz and 3.80 GHz.
                                    The governor "powersave" may decide which speed to use
                                    within this range.


                                    For some unknown reason CPU min and max frequnecy was 3.80GHz. I used https://github.com/pyamsoft/pstate-frequency tool to set powersave governor and this time correct values for CPU minimum and maximum frequencies was set. CPU temp dropped few degrees and battery life is over 7 hours again(was ~3-4 hours). First time after installing 18.04, fan stopped working. (Dell XPS 9560, i7-7700HQ)






                                    share|improve this answer





















                                    • Hi henri17, can you give some more information about the cpupower command, as well as your kernel version? It looks like cpupower is provided by linux-tools-common, but you need to install a version that's specific to your kernel.
                                      – Emily
                                      May 7 at 15:58










                                    • I have : 4.15.0-20-generic #21-Ubuntu SMP Tue Apr 24 06:16:15 UTC 2018 x86_64 x86_64 x86_64 GNU/Linux cpupower 4.15.17
                                      – henri17
                                      May 9 at 12:56















                                    up vote
                                    0
                                    down vote










                                    up vote
                                    0
                                    down vote









                                    Had same problem, fan was working not stop. I discovered that cpu was always at max frequnecy. Intel pstate enabled and powersave governor selected.



                                    cpupower frequency-info
                                    analyzing CPU 0:
                                    driver: intel_pstate
                                    CPUs which run at the same hardware frequency: 0
                                    CPUs which need to have their frequency coordinated by software: 0
                                    maximum transition latency: Cannot determine or is not supported.
                                    hardware limits: 800 MHz - 3.80 GHz
                                    current policy: frequency should be within 3.80 GHz and 3.80 GHz.
                                    The governor "powersave" may decide which speed to use
                                    within this range.


                                    For some unknown reason CPU min and max frequnecy was 3.80GHz. I used https://github.com/pyamsoft/pstate-frequency tool to set powersave governor and this time correct values for CPU minimum and maximum frequencies was set. CPU temp dropped few degrees and battery life is over 7 hours again(was ~3-4 hours). First time after installing 18.04, fan stopped working. (Dell XPS 9560, i7-7700HQ)






                                    share|improve this answer












                                    Had same problem, fan was working not stop. I discovered that cpu was always at max frequnecy. Intel pstate enabled and powersave governor selected.



                                    cpupower frequency-info
                                    analyzing CPU 0:
                                    driver: intel_pstate
                                    CPUs which run at the same hardware frequency: 0
                                    CPUs which need to have their frequency coordinated by software: 0
                                    maximum transition latency: Cannot determine or is not supported.
                                    hardware limits: 800 MHz - 3.80 GHz
                                    current policy: frequency should be within 3.80 GHz and 3.80 GHz.
                                    The governor "powersave" may decide which speed to use
                                    within this range.


                                    For some unknown reason CPU min and max frequnecy was 3.80GHz. I used https://github.com/pyamsoft/pstate-frequency tool to set powersave governor and this time correct values for CPU minimum and maximum frequencies was set. CPU temp dropped few degrees and battery life is over 7 hours again(was ~3-4 hours). First time after installing 18.04, fan stopped working. (Dell XPS 9560, i7-7700HQ)







                                    share|improve this answer












                                    share|improve this answer



                                    share|improve this answer










                                    answered May 7 at 11:15









                                    henri17

                                    11




                                    11












                                    • Hi henri17, can you give some more information about the cpupower command, as well as your kernel version? It looks like cpupower is provided by linux-tools-common, but you need to install a version that's specific to your kernel.
                                      – Emily
                                      May 7 at 15:58










                                    • I have : 4.15.0-20-generic #21-Ubuntu SMP Tue Apr 24 06:16:15 UTC 2018 x86_64 x86_64 x86_64 GNU/Linux cpupower 4.15.17
                                      – henri17
                                      May 9 at 12:56




















                                    • Hi henri17, can you give some more information about the cpupower command, as well as your kernel version? It looks like cpupower is provided by linux-tools-common, but you need to install a version that's specific to your kernel.
                                      – Emily
                                      May 7 at 15:58










                                    • I have : 4.15.0-20-generic #21-Ubuntu SMP Tue Apr 24 06:16:15 UTC 2018 x86_64 x86_64 x86_64 GNU/Linux cpupower 4.15.17
                                      – henri17
                                      May 9 at 12:56


















                                    Hi henri17, can you give some more information about the cpupower command, as well as your kernel version? It looks like cpupower is provided by linux-tools-common, but you need to install a version that's specific to your kernel.
                                    – Emily
                                    May 7 at 15:58




                                    Hi henri17, can you give some more information about the cpupower command, as well as your kernel version? It looks like cpupower is provided by linux-tools-common, but you need to install a version that's specific to your kernel.
                                    – Emily
                                    May 7 at 15:58












                                    I have : 4.15.0-20-generic #21-Ubuntu SMP Tue Apr 24 06:16:15 UTC 2018 x86_64 x86_64 x86_64 GNU/Linux cpupower 4.15.17
                                    – henri17
                                    May 9 at 12:56






                                    I have : 4.15.0-20-generic #21-Ubuntu SMP Tue Apr 24 06:16:15 UTC 2018 x86_64 x86_64 x86_64 GNU/Linux cpupower 4.15.17
                                    – henri17
                                    May 9 at 12:56












                                    up vote
                                    0
                                    down vote













                                    try my personal solution. It's working fine on a Dell Inspiron 3521 15R Intel i3 CPU on Kubuntu 18.04.



                                    Persistent High-Fan Speed Ubuntu 14.04






                                    share|improve this answer

























                                      up vote
                                      0
                                      down vote













                                      try my personal solution. It's working fine on a Dell Inspiron 3521 15R Intel i3 CPU on Kubuntu 18.04.



                                      Persistent High-Fan Speed Ubuntu 14.04






                                      share|improve this answer























                                        up vote
                                        0
                                        down vote










                                        up vote
                                        0
                                        down vote









                                        try my personal solution. It's working fine on a Dell Inspiron 3521 15R Intel i3 CPU on Kubuntu 18.04.



                                        Persistent High-Fan Speed Ubuntu 14.04






                                        share|improve this answer












                                        try my personal solution. It's working fine on a Dell Inspiron 3521 15R Intel i3 CPU on Kubuntu 18.04.



                                        Persistent High-Fan Speed Ubuntu 14.04







                                        share|improve this answer












                                        share|improve this answer



                                        share|improve this answer










                                        answered May 11 at 5:32









                                        Claudio Taccogna

                                        30428




                                        30428






















                                            up vote
                                            0
                                            down vote













                                            If you are using a Dell Inspiron 3521 please see my blog fixing-constantly-running-fans-on-dell-laptops for ubuntu 16.04, if Ubuntu 18.04 still uses the same kernel module dell-smm-hwmon as in ubuntu 16.04 this should still be valid.






                                            share|improve this answer

























                                              up vote
                                              0
                                              down vote













                                              If you are using a Dell Inspiron 3521 please see my blog fixing-constantly-running-fans-on-dell-laptops for ubuntu 16.04, if Ubuntu 18.04 still uses the same kernel module dell-smm-hwmon as in ubuntu 16.04 this should still be valid.






                                              share|improve this answer























                                                up vote
                                                0
                                                down vote










                                                up vote
                                                0
                                                down vote









                                                If you are using a Dell Inspiron 3521 please see my blog fixing-constantly-running-fans-on-dell-laptops for ubuntu 16.04, if Ubuntu 18.04 still uses the same kernel module dell-smm-hwmon as in ubuntu 16.04 this should still be valid.






                                                share|improve this answer












                                                If you are using a Dell Inspiron 3521 please see my blog fixing-constantly-running-fans-on-dell-laptops for ubuntu 16.04, if Ubuntu 18.04 still uses the same kernel module dell-smm-hwmon as in ubuntu 16.04 this should still be valid.







                                                share|improve this answer












                                                share|improve this answer



                                                share|improve this answer










                                                answered Nov 20 at 4:02









                                                Kasun Siyambalapitiya

                                                328515




                                                328515






























                                                     

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