On Thu, 2002-05-30 at 10:45, Ed Harrison wrote: : :
Actually, you have just begun. You need to look at /etc/sensors.conf with its extensive comments to adjust the calculations for these 3 items.
I use gkrellm where the adjustments to get correct readings much easier.
Sure thing, sensors and gkrellm. Tinker with it like the man says, and you can customise the labels and many other parameters. Just to be sure, find an excuse to reboot, so you can check directly the BIOS temperature readings. Did that after a heavy season ,like recompiling a kernel or Mozilla. Once done, you can finetune the readouts in gkrellm. Here's mine since many months: via686a-isa-6000 Adapter: ISA adapter Algorithm: ISA algorithm CPU0 core: +1.73 V (min = +0.00 V, max = +3.03 V) CPU1 core: +1.71 V (min = +2.29 V, max = +2.74 V) ALARM 3.3V: +3.27 V (min = +2.95 V, max = +3.62 V) +5V: +4.97 V (min = +4.47 V, max = +5.49 V) +12V: +11.74 V (min = +10.79 V, max = +13.18 V) CPU0 Fan: 5532 RPM (min = 3000 RPM, div = 2) CPU1 Fan: 5625 RPM (min = 3000 RPM, div = 2) CPU0 Temp:+28.9°C (limit = +60°C, hysteresis = +50°C) CPU1 Temp:+31.7°C (limit = +60°C, hysteresis = +50°C) SBr Temp: +23.0°C (limit = +60°C, hysteresis = +50°C) Yes, the 12V line might just be a bit low, but hey: 5 Fujitsu MAG/J 10K SCSI drives 1 Pioneer DVD 114 1 Yamaha CRW3200E 1 NEC CDROM SCSI 1 Internal Zip100 Importantly, PSU is Enermax 351-??? -- Kemdi IN_SuSE_d Since 5.2 123792 of counter.li.org ICQ:112290572