* On Mon, Feb 03, 2003 at 02:19:45PM -0500, karrottop ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) wrote: > > I am re-posting this because I was made aware I sent it as a reply to > another post. Sorry about that, so without further adue here is my > intended post now... > > > I am having a great deal of trouble getting lm_sensors to work under > debian. I am pretty sure that I am about 75% on the way to getting this > started but none the less, if someone could give me a bit of a > walk-through to getting things running I would appreciate it. My > intention is mostly to monitor my hardware temp's etc, being that I am > using a water cooled system, and I am a bit uneasy about not knowing the > performance of my system, especially one that is overclocked. If it > matters I am using sid, a soyo motherboard with a via chipset, and > kernel 2.4.20 ( I have built in everything in the i2c portion of > charcter devices ) > > > > -- > To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] > with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED] >
Got hardware sensors working on a few motherboards here and even took notes on how it was done. Perhaps these notes might be useful to you. Notes on Installing sensor support in a Debian system. 0) For the following, it is assumed that a new 2.4.20 kernel was already compiled, installed and working. It is also assumed that the kernel was compiled using the debian kernel build system make-kpkg. The kernel source should be in /usr/src/linux either directly or by a symbolic link. 1) have a working 2.4 series kernel with module support included. Make sure that i2o items are NOT compiled in. Once this kernel is installed and working, the modules are ready to be included. Make sure you are running the kernel to which the modules are to be added. This seems to be the easiest way to make the module version numbers consistent with the kernel version number. 2) obtain the debian packages: i2c-source,lm-sensors, lm-sensors-source, and sensord. Optionally also get other monitors like sensor-sweep-applet, wmsensors or xsensors. The package xsensors is not in woody but getting the source and building it locally using apt-get source works fine. 3) Become root and change to the /usr/src directory. In this directory there will be tar files named i2c.tar.gz and lm-sensors.tar.gz. When these tar files are expanded they write themselves into the /usr/src/modules directory. This directory may already exist if other modules have already been installed in this kernel. 4) Extract the files by "tar zxf i2c.tar.gz" and "tar zxf lm-sensors.tar.gz" 5) cd /usr/src/linux and run the command "make-kpkg modules_image" When the build has completed there will be debian packages in /usr/src named i2c-2.4.19_2.6.5-3+lb.custom.1.1_i386.deb and lm-sensors-2.4.19_2.6.4-3+lb.custom.1.1_i386.deb 6) install these packages with the commands dpkg -i i2c-2.4.19_2.6.5-3+lb.custom.1.1_i386.deb and dpkg -i lm-sensors-2.4.19_2.6.4-3+lb.custom.1.1_i386.deb 7) As root (as always) run the program sensors-detect. This tool sweeps the smbus and determines the devices that are on it. It then reports the chip types and the relevant modules that need to be loaded to get the hardware sensors system working. This program mostly works but does not always work. See the last step for suggestions if the modules were detected incorrectly. 8) Cut and paste the results from sensors-detect into the relevant files as it requests. For one motherboard as an example, the lines: # I2C adapter drivers i2c-viapro # I2C chip drivers w83781d have to be pasted into the file /etc/modules. Then the command update-modules has to be run. Then paste the lines # I2C module options alias char-major-89 i2c-dev into the file /etc/modutils/local Then run the command /etc/init.d/modutils 9) After these steps are completed, the required modules will be loaded. This can be checked by the output of the lsmod command. The output for this example is Module Size Used by Tainted: P w83781d 19224 0 (unused) i2c-proc 6416 0 [w83781d] i2c-viapro 3860 0 (unused) i2c-core 15052 0 [w83781d i2c-proc i2c-viapro] 10) Then reboot the system. If the module system is working correctly then after boot the loaded modules should be identical to the previous output of lsmod 11) To verify that the kernel interface is correctly tied to the hardware run the command "sensors" Typical output in this example is w83782d-i2c-0-2d Adapter: SMBus Via Pro adapter at e800 Algorithm: Non-I2C SMBus adapter VCore 1: +1.77 V (min = +1.74 V, max = +1.93 V) (beep) VCore 2: +2.51 V (min = +1.74 V, max = +1.93 V) (beep) +3.3V: +3.32 V (min = +3.13 V, max = +3.45 V) (beep) +5V: +5.07 V (min = +4.72 V, max = +5.24 V) (beep) +12V: +12.46 V (min = +10.79 V, max = +13.19 V) -12V: -12.29 V (min = -13.21 V, max = -10.90 V) -5V: -5.45 V (min = -5.26 V, max = -4.76 V) V5SB: +0.13 V (min = +0.13 V, max = +0.13 V) VBat: +0.08 V (min = +0.08 V, max = +0.08 V) fan1: 0 RPM (min = 3000 RPM, div = 2) (beep) fan2: 0 RPM (min = 187 RPM, div = 32) (beep) fan3: 0 RPM (min = 3000 RPM, div = 2) temp1: +32°C (limit = +60°C) sensor = thermistor (beep) temp2: +33.5°C (limit = +60°C, hysteresis = +50°C) sensor = thermistor (beep) temp3: +255.5°C (limit = +60°C, hysteresis = +50°C) sensor = 3904 transistor vid: +1.850 V alarms: beep_enable: Sound alarm disabled It is pretty important to confirm these values by comparing them to the readings that the BIOS reports. If the numbers match all is well. If the numbers dont match then you have problems. One possibility is that the sensors-detect program detected the wrong kind of hardware. Confirm what the detected hardware matches the motherboard type. If the hardware is correct confirm that the correct hardware module type is enabled in the file "/etc/sensors.conf". This file controls the translation from hardware digital numbers to human readable floating point numbers. This file is heavily documented and modifying it should be self-explanatory. 12) At this point the hardware sensor system is operational and higher level tools like xsensors can be run. If the output is correct then the interface to /proc/sys/dev/sensors is also working 13) The highest level routines like sensord, ksensors, wmsensors, or sensor_sweep_applet can now be configured to run as desired. 14) One some (maybe many motherboards) the above is sufficient to get things working. But I had a couple of motherboard types that failed in different ways. On one motherboard sensors-detect correctly detected the hardware but on this motherboard (Asus P5A) the smbus is known to be broken but the isa bus works and the hardware can be accessed from there. Googling for "lm sensors Asus P5A" led right to the lm sensors documentation which explained that the problem is known and the workaround is to use the isa bus. No explanation given as to how to do that. More searching and tinkering led to the answer of putting the module i2c-isa into the /etc/modules file. Then things started working. On another motherboard, (Gigabyte 7ZMMH) sensors-detect reported the wrong hardware. Here the solution was to determine the actual hardware on the motherboard. I found the site http://mbm.livewiredev.com/ to be helpful here. Then googling for combinations of the motherboard hardware chipset and lm sensors led to a page where someone kindly listed the modules required for this to work. After making this change everything started working HTH Cheers -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]