It could be a real problem for high-end linux users or linux enthusiast in general. The best way to keep your GPU cool is by changing its fan speed manually or through software that allows you to control fan speeds, such as MSI Afterburner. fcsettings.ini - all settings are stored here Instalation. Make shortcut for this to get easy access. Taking the fan speed to 100 will increase the noise so, you will have to test. Rather than installing script’s from the internet, which generally shouldn’t be recommended to anyone, anywhere. Radeon FanController.exe - enable/disable application, set your fan curve and other settings. The fans will spin at a fixed speed regardless of your graphics card temperature. SpeedFan is the most popular software for fan control. Then it’s better to run those in a container or VM within the OS (or read the code). Macs Fan Control allows you to monitor and control almost any aspect of your computers fans, with support for controlling fan speed, temperature sensors pane, menu-bar icon, and autostart with system option. You can get more advanced control over your fans with this free utility. These things can be done on a level the end-user does not understand, for example with tools, scripts and whatnot. (Mine some coin, redirect packets or worse) You will see that fan controls of Radeon Settings software will work smoothly. Disable AfterBurner for Windows startup and restart your computer. This means that AfterBurner can affect fan controls set by AMD. The open source driver problem, for example can arise from people or potential groups messing with the code on an end-users computer and make the users hardware do things it’s not supposed to be doing. If you use fan controller from MSI AfterBurner, settings for AMD Radeon Settings software will not work. The performance of which last i checked surpassed the proprietary drivers by far. When the MESA drivers have come so far and also has tools / scripts available for the open source driver. Wouldn’t recommend anyone using the amdgpu driver though, unless it’s workload specific.
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