How to Install and Uninstall gnome-shell-extension-freon.noarch Package on Fedora 34
Last updated: October 05,2024
1. Install "gnome-shell-extension-freon.noarch" package
Learn how to install gnome-shell-extension-freon.noarch on Fedora 34
$
sudo dnf update
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$
sudo dnf install
gnome-shell-extension-freon.noarch
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2. Uninstall "gnome-shell-extension-freon.noarch" package
Please follow the step by step instructions below to uninstall gnome-shell-extension-freon.noarch on Fedora 34:
$
sudo dnf remove
gnome-shell-extension-freon.noarch
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$
sudo dnf autoremove
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3. Information about the gnome-shell-extension-freon.noarch package on Fedora 34
Last metadata expiration check: 0:16:53 ago on Tue Sep 6 14:10:38 2022.
Available Packages
Name : gnome-shell-extension-freon
Epoch : 2
Version : 44
Release : 1.fc34
Architecture : noarch
Size : 48 k
Source : gnome-shell-extension-freon-44-1.fc34.src.rpm
Repository : updates
Summary : GNOME Shell extension to display system temperature, voltage, and fan speed
URL : https://github.com/UshakovVasilii/gnome-shell-extension-freon/wiki
License : GPLv2
Description : Freon is a GNOME Shell extension for displaying the temperature of your
: CPU, hard disk, solid state, and video card (NVIDIA, Catalyst, and
: Bumblebee supported), as well as power supply voltage, and fan
: speed. You can choose which HDD/SSD or other devices to include, what
: temperature units to use, and how often to refresh the sensors readout,
: and they will appear in the GNOME Shell top bar.
:
: **NOTE** that if you want to see GPU temperature, you will need to
: install the vendor's driver and any related packages. (Nouveau
: unfortunately won't work for Nvidia cards.)
:
: * hard drive temperatures requires udisks2, or smartmontools, or both
: hddtemp and GNU netcat. (udisks2 should already be installed by
: default on Fedora Workstation, but if you want to use hddtemp instead,
: you will need to install it and netcat yourself, and enable the
: hddtemp daemon.)
: * Nvidia GPU temperatures require the `nvidia-settings` application,
: typically installed with the proprietary Nvidia drivers.
: * Bumblebee + Nvidia requires `optirun`.
: * AMD GPU temperatures requires `aticonfig`, part of AMD Radeon Software
: (formerly known as AMD Catalyst).
Available Packages
Name : gnome-shell-extension-freon
Epoch : 2
Version : 44
Release : 1.fc34
Architecture : noarch
Size : 48 k
Source : gnome-shell-extension-freon-44-1.fc34.src.rpm
Repository : updates
Summary : GNOME Shell extension to display system temperature, voltage, and fan speed
URL : https://github.com/UshakovVasilii/gnome-shell-extension-freon/wiki
License : GPLv2
Description : Freon is a GNOME Shell extension for displaying the temperature of your
: CPU, hard disk, solid state, and video card (NVIDIA, Catalyst, and
: Bumblebee supported), as well as power supply voltage, and fan
: speed. You can choose which HDD/SSD or other devices to include, what
: temperature units to use, and how often to refresh the sensors readout,
: and they will appear in the GNOME Shell top bar.
:
: **NOTE** that if you want to see GPU temperature, you will need to
: install the vendor's driver and any related packages. (Nouveau
: unfortunately won't work for Nvidia cards.)
:
: * hard drive temperatures requires udisks2, or smartmontools, or both
: hddtemp and GNU netcat. (udisks2 should already be installed by
: default on Fedora Workstation, but if you want to use hddtemp instead,
: you will need to install it and netcat yourself, and enable the
: hddtemp daemon.)
: * Nvidia GPU temperatures require the `nvidia-settings` application,
: typically installed with the proprietary Nvidia drivers.
: * Bumblebee + Nvidia requires `optirun`.
: * AMD GPU temperatures requires `aticonfig`, part of AMD Radeon Software
: (formerly known as AMD Catalyst).