Some Linux distributions have a hddfancontrol package available in their repository: Most motherboards and SATA drives fit these requirements. exposes to the OS a sensor to query fan speed.exposes to the OS a PWM to control fan speed.A least one SATA hard drive, that supports:.Can also optionally monitor CPU temperature, and control fan speed accordingly.Can be configured to never set the fans below a certain speed (useful if the fans controlled by HDD Fan control are the only ones available in the chassis).Can be set to stop fans or run them at full speed at customizable temperatures.Can adapt to different fan characteristics. Can automatically spin down drives after a customizable period of inactivity.Supports 6 different ways of querying temperature:.Can control several fans and/or several drives with a single invocation.It that case the CPU will generate less heat than the hard drives and it makes sense to control fan speed according to the main heat source. ARM or Intel Atom) with passive cooling (no fans), and a chassis with fans close to the hard drive. The ideal use case is for a NAS with several hard drives, a low power CPU (ie. HDD Fan control is useful when you have one or several hard drives with one or several fans close to them, and do not want to let the motherboard control the fan speed, because it does so either statically, or using a temperature sensor unrelated to the real drive temperature (either on the CPU or on some other place on the motherboard).
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