Hi All,
Another fan control question, but this one is a little different and I'm not even certain that this is the right place to ask it - but it might start leading me in the right direction.
I have a small home fileserver. The mainboard is an Asus AT3IONT-I Deluxe. I'm actually using FreeNAS (I hope you'll forgive me that!). I have a number (4 initially, room to expand to 8) 1TB 2.5" SATA drives housed in a pair of 5.25" 4-drive hot-swap backplanes (this one, in fact). These are controlled by a seperate controller card.
The enclosures each have a pair of 40mm fans, and these are always on if there is a drive in place. They make quite a bit of noise - everything else in the system is passive. What I'd really like to do is find a way of controlling them so they they only come on to provide extra cooling if the S.M.A.R.T. temperature readings for a drive indicate that it's gone above a certain threshold.
What I haven't tried doing yet is running the system for a while with the fans disconnected and monitoring the S.M.A.R.T. temperature readings - that's a task I'll try to schedule soon. In the interim can anyone start to offer any advice on how this level of control might be achieved?
Thanks - Adam...
Another fan control question, but this one is a little different and I'm not even certain that this is the right place to ask it - but it might start leading me in the right direction.
I have a small home fileserver. The mainboard is an Asus AT3IONT-I Deluxe. I'm actually using FreeNAS (I hope you'll forgive me that!). I have a number (4 initially, room to expand to 8) 1TB 2.5" SATA drives housed in a pair of 5.25" 4-drive hot-swap backplanes (this one, in fact). These are controlled by a seperate controller card.
The enclosures each have a pair of 40mm fans, and these are always on if there is a drive in place. They make quite a bit of noise - everything else in the system is passive. What I'd really like to do is find a way of controlling them so they they only come on to provide extra cooling if the S.M.A.R.T. temperature readings for a drive indicate that it's gone above a certain threshold.
What I haven't tried doing yet is running the system for a while with the fans disconnected and monitoring the S.M.A.R.T. temperature readings - that's a task I'll try to schedule soon. In the interim can anyone start to offer any advice on how this level of control might be achieved?
Thanks - Adam...