B&W processing commonly is done at or about room temperature, so temperature regulation is rarely a problem. Color, C-41 or E-6, does require temperature regulation, most commonly with some form of water bath. For color (only), I use a Unicolor system from the 1980s which agitates with a roller base, rolling a film drum which is heavily insulated. The loaded drum and film are brought to process temp with heated water. Once at temp, the heated processing solutions and water baths tend to maintain system temperature as each step progresses. For longer development steps, as in E-6, a "drift by" temperature control works well. (Test the temperature drop over process time for a given step, divide by 2 and add that amount to the starting temp for the step. So, a developer may start 2 degrees over the recommended temp and end 2 degrees below. Sounds funky but it works well. Since other process steps go to completion in E-6, I can make that temp adjustment for the developers and apply it to all of the process steps, so separate temperatures for each chemical is not required.)