Am Sonntag, 16. Juni 2024, 04:03:49 CEST schrieb jpeter17359...@tutanota.com: Just a shot:
Take a look, if you have the packaget "fancontrol" installed. Then as root start the command "fancontrol" and see, if the vents are recognized. Normally they should stop, then start again. Just follow the instructions. This command is creating the file /etc/fancontrol, which you can later fine tune (i.e. tell, at which temperature the fans will start). On Asus laptops (especiially older laptops like eepc), I had to decide, which kernel module shoulds be used. One is "wmi" (the other one I forgot the neame of (too long ago!). Modern kernels are using wmi, but maybe your cpu does not support it and needs the older one (maybe someone else knows more). There are kernel options, which decide, which module is used. However, this is mostly on my EEEPC, but maybe other older laptops may alos depend on it. Just some ideas, hope this is helping though.... Best regards Hans > Hello Tomas, > > I looked at the boot.log files, as well as the output from your command, and > didn't see any errors or warnings. > > I'm going to report this issue to sub...@bugs.debian.org. > > The laptop is ten years old, but this behavior is definitely abnormal. > > Best regards, > > Jeff >