CPU temperature watching
Knapp
magick.crow at gmail.com
Fri Mar 9 07:28:09 UTC 2007
Building a kernel is very easy. I recomend Gentoo web sites for more
info. They have great docs about building all sorts of things
including kernels.
To watch the temp try using Ksysgaurd performance monitor. You can add
the sensor there. I have it and it always says 40c but I have never
had need to change an Ubuntu kernel or anything like that so maybe it
is a wrong number.
Douglas
On 3/9/07, Fred Schaer <fred.schaer at wanadoo.fr> wrote:
> I'm trying to get lm-sensors configured for my core 2 duo /p5B deluxe,
> but it seems there are things missing in the kernel to watch the CPU temp...
> I downloaded kernel patches, but now I guess I have to patch/build a
> recent kernel (2.6.20 or something like that)
>
> not so trivial indeed ;)
>
> Cheers
>
> Ron Morse a écrit :
> > On Thursday 08 March 2007 12:37:23 pm Donn wrote:
> >
> >> So, what's the best way to see the CPU temp and get alerts and
> >> whatnot? I know zippo about this topic. I have found two candidates
> >> lm-sensors and xmbmon, but that's just a quick apt-cache search.
> >>
> >> /d
> >>
> >
> > I've used Ksensors in the past. It's a front end for lm-sensors so you
> > need to install that, too.
> >
> > Configuring lm-sensors is non-trivial in some cases. I recommend
> > spending some time with the documentation before trying to set it up.
> > Once you get lm-sensors configured, you can just use apt-get or any
> > other package manager to install ksensors.
> >
> > Ron Morse
> >
> >
>
>
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--
Ein Leben ohne Mops ist möglich,
doch völlig sinnlos.
-Loriot
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