Is there a Windows standard way to do things such as "start fan", "decrease speed" or the like, from C/C++?
I have a suspicion it might be ACPI, but I am a frail mortal and cannot read that kind of documentation.
Edit: e.g. Windows 7 lets you select in your power plan options such as "passive cooling" (only when things get hot?) vs. "active cooling" (keep the CPU proactively cool?). It seems the OS does have a way to control the fan generically.
Look for a System Configuration option, navigate to it (usually using the cursor keys), and then look for a setting related to your fan. On our test machine this was an option called 'Fan Always On' which was enabled. Most PCs will give you the option to set temperature thresholds when you want the fan to kick in.
I am at the moment working on a project that, among other things, controls the computer fans. Basically, the fans are controlled by the superIO chip of your computer. We access the chip directly using port-mapped IO, and from there we can get to the logical fan device. Using port-mapped IO requires the code to run in kernel mode, but windows does not supply any drivers for generic port IO (with good reason, since it is a very powerful tool), so we wrote our own driver, and used that.
If you want to go down this route, you basically need knowledge in two areas: driver development and how to access and interpret superIO chip information. When we started the project, we didn't know anything in either of these areas, so it has been learning by browsing, reading and finally doing. To gain the knowledge, we have been especially helped by looking at these links:
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