Forum › Forums › New users › New Users and General Questions › Does acpi-tools still exist?
- This topic has 11 replies, 6 voices, and was last updated Mar 20-10:19 pm by ex_Koo.
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AuthorPosts
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March 18, 2019 at 6:25 pm #19536Member
stevesr0
I am trying to monitor my cpu fan speed. I have tried lm-sensors, psensor, xsensor and fan speed doesn’t show.
On Linux Questions, I saw a post by our own rokytnji mentioning the need to install acpi and acpi-tools.
I can’t find acpi-tools. There is an acpitool in the repository but that appears to be very different.
My searches haven’t clarified this.
I am hoping that someone will alert rokytnji that I have asked this question in hopes she will respond.
(I still am confused about how to PM people on this forum.)Appreciate any assistance and comments.
stevesr0
March 18, 2019 at 9:44 pm #19543Anonymous
::how to PM people on this forum
Left side, avatar image + username, displayed with each post.
Clicking the image or the username text will display a page containing a “Send a Message” hyperlink.
( I just checked: when I click on my own name, the “Send a Message” link is not displayed. Aw, shucks. )March 19, 2019 at 2:20 am #19546Forum Admin
rokytnji
::Documentation for the acpica project.
Man page for acpica-tools in Debian.
Are you sure you have fan sensors?
sensors | grep fanor
sensors | grep -i fanMight wanna take a look at using
https://packages.debian.org/sid/utils/s-tui
Instead. The above link for debian sid package. Do not manually install it if not running sid repos. If running Testing. Debian Buster has the same package number available in testing I would think.
https://packages.debian.org/buster/s-tuiPoke and hope experiment and me picking up the broken pieces is usually how I roll. I would install acpica-tools since it is just a module and can be un-installed if still no joy . At this moment . I cannot say if acpica-tools replaced acpi-tools. I usually jest test for myself.
It won’t hurt to post a terminal readout of
lscpi -vnnin thread either so folks can see your components as well as a
inxi -FxzrTermnal readout also. Middle of the night here. Signing off.
Sometimes I drive a crooked road to get my mind straight.
Not all who Wander are Lost.
I'm not outa place. I'm from outer space.Linux Registered User # 475019
How to Search for AntiX solutions to your problemsMarch 19, 2019 at 5:11 am #19548Forum Admin
Dave
::I think you need to run sensors-detect to have the sensors command to output more than one line of information.
Computers are like air conditioners. They work fine until you start opening Windows. ~Author Unknown
March 19, 2019 at 11:06 am #19561Memberstevesr0
::Thanks, Dave.
After posting, I found a post by rokytnji and did PM her. I have had some difficulty in finding people on the forum to get to their avatars…
stevesr0
March 19, 2019 at 11:18 am #19564Memberstevesr0
::Hi rokytnji,
I am responding from another computer, so I can’t attach it at the moment.
After installing acpica, lm-sensors, xsensors and psenssors and running sensors-detect, nothing shows when I run sensors | grep fan or sensors | grep -i fan.
I am not sure if my cpu fan (or computer) has a fan sensor. I recall checking the manual and didn’t see that as a specification, but…
The computer is oldish from about 2006 or 2007 as I recall (a Fujitsu T4220 model).
The current fan is a cheap replacement for the original and I don’t have a manual (or a name) to check on it.
More of academic interest, since the fans seem to turn on when I run something theat stimulates the CPU and then they quiet down.
I am confused by the acpi-tools question. In years past, I thouught that was a separate package or collection of files. Now, can’t find anything under that name — except for your 2012 (?) post in Linux Questions suggesting that it had to be installed.
Has that package been eliminated?
stevesr0
March 19, 2019 at 11:19 am #19565Memberstevesr0
March 19, 2019 at 1:18 pm #19573Forum Admin
rokytnji
::After installing acpica, lm-sensors, xsensors and psenssors and running sensors-detect, nothing shows when I run sensors | grep fan or sensors | grep -i fan.
Well. My post from 2012 is 7 years old which is ages lately in the linux eco-system. No systemd then. Plus other things work differently since then like Gnome Desktop.
Soo. Experiment time if your game.sudo apt-get updateLet it finish updating package list first.
sudo apt-get install acpi-support-baseafter installing that. Install the recommends
sudo apt-get install acpi-supportThen check and make sure these recommends/depends are also installed .
consolekit
acpi-fakekeyReboot. Cross fingers. Run sensors-detect again.
Here is ancient Fujitsu bug report. If you are getting cpu cycles better than that bug report. I’d forget about trying to find fan speed sensors on gear so old.
https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/linux/+bug/177076
Something I paid attention to when reading the above bug report was
I have the same problems on every linux distro I have tried on this laptop
Fujitsu laptops can be strange creatures because they are designed for corp security/corp laptops, and so because of that have unknown quirks. I learned this from a Fujitsu Puppy Linux dude located south of me in Texas.
PS. I am a dude. Not a she.
- This reply was modified 4 years, 1 month ago by rokytnji.
Sometimes I drive a crooked road to get my mind straight.
Not all who Wander are Lost.
I'm not outa place. I'm from outer space.Linux Registered User # 475019
How to Search for AntiX solutions to your problemsMarch 19, 2019 at 2:32 pm #19581Memberstevesr0
::Hi rokytnji,
Thank you sir for the reply. My Fujitsu reports much higher CPU frequencies than 800.
I had everything installed except acpi-fakekey.
I will report back after rebooting.
Still curious – did acpi-tools ever exist and did it go away or was it a figment of my imagination?
stevesr0
March 19, 2019 at 4:01 pm #19584Forum Admin
BitJam
::There is an “acpitool” package: https://packages.debian.org/stretch/acpitool
AcpiTool is a Linux ACPI client. It’s a small command line application, intended to be a replacement for the apm tool. The primary target audience are laptop users, since these people are most interested in things like battery status, thermal status and the ability to suspend (sleep mode). The program simply accesses the /proc/acpi or /sysfs entries to get or set ACPI values. It also supports various extensions for Toshiba, Asus, and IBM Thinkpad laptops.
Context is worth 80 IQ points -- Alan Kay
March 20, 2019 at 6:26 pm #19611Memberstevesr0
::Thanks BitJam,
I saw that program in the repository. It seemed like that was distinct from the acpi suite.
I am satisfied at the moment that my fans seem to be working normally and I suspect that they don’t have a sensor (or the laptop doesn’t).
At this point, I will consider that my question does acpi-tools exist has been answered in the negative.
stevesr0
March 20, 2019 at 10:19 pm #19612Memberex_Koo
::rokytnji
Thanks for s-tui Nice cli monitor..
It won’t hurt to post a terminal readout of
lscpi -vnnlspci -vnn not lscpi
- This reply was modified 4 years, 1 month ago by ex_Koo.
- This reply was modified 4 years, 1 month ago by ex_Koo.
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