If you have any questions or suggestions, you can join the chat on [Matrix](https://matrix.to/#/#tuxclocker:matrix.org) or [IRC](https://webchat.oftc.net/?nick=&channels=%23tuxclocker&uio=d4)
- Read and write device properties (Click on a selected node to edit)
- Connect any writable property to any readable property, for more possibilities than just fan curves. Currently only possible with range-based writable properties (Right click on a node)
- Reset writable properties to default (Right click on a node)
- Profiles
- Option to apply profile settings on startup/profile change
NVIDIA GPUs require [Coolbits](https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/NVIDIA/Tips_and_tricks#Enabling_overclocking) set to enable editing of most writable properties (31 for all functionality)
Once you have installed everything into a proper location, TuxClocker is available with `tuxclocker-qt` from the terminal. There is currently no desktop entry so TuxClocker won't come up in any launcher.
If TuxClocker shows up with no items, there may be a problem with connecting to the DBus daemon. Refer to your system documentation on where DBus system service entries should be located. Alternatively, you can launch the needed components manually as explained in the Developing/Scripts section of the README.
There are a few scripts in `dev/` for development convenience, mainly to deal with DBus. A separate DBus instance and custom config file is used, so the TuxClocker daemon is able to be registered without installing service files into the system.
Note: the following scripts assume TuxClocker is installed to `inst/`, so `meson` should be called as follows:
`meson build --prefix=$(pwd)/inst`
The scripts should be used in this order (they all have to be running simultaneously, so probably best to run in separate terminals):
`dev/dbus-start.sh` Starts a separate DBus instance.
`dev/tuxclockerd-start.sh` Launches `tuxclockerd` making it connect to our separate DBus instance and LD_LIBRARY_PATH set to find the built `libtuxclocker`.
`dev/gui-start.sh` Launches the TuxClocker GUI making it connect to our separate DBus instance, so it can find the TuxClocker DBus service.
You can also use a program like `d-feet` if you are only making changes to the daemon. (To be documented)