d disk temperatures, I have
set the set-user-ID bit on hddtemp(8):
# chmod u+s /usr/sbin/hddtemp
hddtemp has been superseded by a kernel module, which you can enable
like so:
# enable getting the hard drive's temperature.
echo drivetemp > /etc/modules-load.d/drivetemp.conf
Now you can get rid
atures, I have
> >> set the set-user-ID bit on hddtemp(8):
> >>
> >> # chmod u+s /usr/sbin/hddtemp
> >
> > hddtemp has been superseded by a kernel module, which you can enable
> > like so:
> >
> > # enable getting the hard drive's t
, which you can enable
like so:
# enable getting the hard drive's temperature.
echo drivetemp > /etc/modules-load.d/drivetemp.conf
Now you can get rid of hddtemp.
I use that with xfce and the sensor plugin you mentioned.
Thank you for the reply. :-)
David
o:
# enable getting the hard drive's temperature.
echo drivetemp > /etc/modules-load.d/drivetemp.conf
Now you can get rid of hddtemp.
I use that with xfce and the sensor plugin you mentioned.
--
Does anybody read signatures any more?
https://charlescurley.com
https://charlescurley.com/blog/
On 10/26/24 22:11, Corey wrote:
where shall i check the CPU temperature in command line?
my dell laptop gets hot and hot when debian run for some time. do you think
it's due to cpu too busy?
Thanks.
My current daily driver is a Dell PowerEdge T30 Xeon E3-1225 v5:
2024-10-27 08:28:10
On Sun, Oct 27, 2024 at 4:48 AM Corey wrote:
> where shall i check the CPU temperature in command line?
> my dell laptop gets hot and hot when debian run for some time. do you
> think it's due to cpu too busy?
>
LM-Sensors displays chipset temps and fan speeds.
sudo apt i
Hello,
cat /sys/class/thermal/thermal_zone0/temp / 1000 = °C
Work's for me on raspberry pi and Thinkpad Laptop.
Best Regards
Am 27.10.24 um 06:11 schrieb Corey:
where shall i check the CPU temperature in command line?
my dell laptop gets hot and hot when debian run for some time. d
where shall i check the CPU temperature in command line?
my dell laptop gets hot and hot when debian run for some time. do you think
it's due to cpu too busy?
Thanks.
Hi list,
I've an Asus Prime Z490-A paired with an i9-10850k. This motherboard has
the t_sensor (2 pin) plug that permit me to plug a temperature sensor.
I attached one but can't get values from sensors (I ran also
sensors-detect) while in the BIOS, under Monitoring I can see the
Am Freitag, dem 14.07.2023 um 21:52 +0200 schrieb zithro:
> On 14 Jul 2023 10:53, Joe wrote:
> > On Fri, 14 Jul 2023 09:27:12 +0200
> > Bruno Kleinert wrote:
> >
> > > Hello,
> > >
> > > I'm looking for a wireless way to measure temperature
I was just researching this myself a couple of days ago, and spent
several hours going down a rabbit hole.
It seems that many folks are going the way of using an open source
solution, Home Assistant (aka, HA), (https://www.home-assistant.io/).
Even to the point where I found that folks that used t
zithro wrote:
> On 14 Jul 2023 10:53, Joe wrote:
> > On Fri, 14 Jul 2023 09:27:12 +0200
> > Bruno Kleinert wrote:
> >
> >> Hello,
> >>
> >> I'm looking for a wireless way to measure temperature and humidity
> >> indoor with
On Fri, 14 Jul 2023 21:52:01 +0200
zithro wrote:
>
> Joe, out of curiosity, what are you using to display the graphs ?
> If you didn't read above, I'm using jpgraph, a PHP lib.
>
Basic stuff, Imagick which is a PHP binding to some ImageMagick
functions.
--
Joe
On 14 Jul 2023 10:53, Joe wrote:
On Fri, 14 Jul 2023 09:27:12 +0200
Bruno Kleinert wrote:
Hello,
I'm looking for a wireless way to measure temperature and humidity
indoor with hardware off the shelf and software included in Debian 12
bookworm.
Sensors --> Radio --> Receiver --&g
Nate Bargmann wrote:
> * On 2023 14 Jul 02:37 -0500, Bruno Kleinert wrote:
> > Hello,
> >
> > I'm looking for a wireless way to measure temperature and humidity
> > indoor with hardware off the shelf and software included in Debian
> > 12 bookworm.
>
&
On Fri, Jul 14, 2023 at 3:37 AM Bruno Kleinert wrote:
>
> I'm looking for a wireless way to measure temperature and humidity indoor
> with hardware off the shelf and software included in Debian 12 bookworm.
>
> Sensors --> Radio --> Receiver --> Any typical PC inte
* On 2023 14 Jul 02:37 -0500, Bruno Kleinert wrote:
> Hello,
>
> I'm looking for a wireless way to measure temperature and humidity
> indoor with hardware off the shelf and software included in Debian 12
> bookworm.
Off the shelf the Davis Vantage Pro 2 is probably one of
as zigbee
So work out how much power you have and then choose the technology. Most
likely it will be arduino, I2C for a combined temperature humidity
sensor such as DHT22 AM2302 DHT11/DHT12 AM2320, and matching zigbee modules.
On Fri, 14 Jul 2023 09:27:12 +0200
Bruno Kleinert wrote:
> Hello,
>
> I'm looking for a wireless way to measure temperature and humidity
> indoor with hardware off the shelf and software included in Debian 12
> bookworm.
>
> Sensors --> Radio --> Receiver -
Hello,
I'm looking for a wireless way to measure temperature and humidity
indoor with hardware off the shelf and software included in Debian 12
bookworm.
Sensors --> Radio --> Receiver --> Any typical PC interface, e.g., USB,
Ethernet.
I don't need a visual interface,
On 2023-04-08 11:31:44 -0400, songbird wrote:
> Jeremy Nicoll wrote:
> > Wouldn't it be better to limit the amount of cputime that
> > the hogging application is using?
> >
> > Google suggests that "nice" or "cpulimit" might do that.
>
> nice didn't do it. "nice -n 19" didn't make any change.
On 11/04/2023 07:12, songbird wrote:
the bios did let me turn down the temperature so we'll see
how that works next time i need to do an upload.
I am curious if it affects
/sys/class/thermal/thermal_zone*
I have never tried to do anything with this interface. I decided to look
into
i don't want to reboot
> at the moment to check that. will check later.
the bios did let me turn down the temperature so we'll see
how that works next time i need to do an upload.
songbird
On 4/8/23 07:17, songbird wrote:
i have a program that has changed it's behavior to suddenly
become a CPU hog (while doing something simple like uploading
files for my website). probably a bug, but it got me to
wondering how i could limit the CPU temperature to a range
well below the ma
ot me to
wondering how i could limit the CPU temperature to a range
well below the maximum that kicks in by the CPU itself.
i have an intel processor and it has the MAX which does
prevent it from going higher (100C), but i'd like to keep it
at 70C or lower.
i've been trying to fin
Darac Marjal wrote:
> As an alternative, you could try writing a small shell
> script that works like the following (pseudocode):
>
> STOP_TEMP=70
> START_TEMP=65
> JOB_RUNNING=1
>
> while true:
>cpu_temp=$(cat /sys/something/temperature)
>
>if JOB
On 08/04/2023 15:17, songbird wrote:
i have a program that has changed it's behavior to suddenly
become a CPU hog (while doing something simple like uploading
files for my website). probably a bug, but it got me to
wondering how i could limit the CPU temperature to a range
well belo
t the CPU temperature to a range
well below the maximum that kicks in by the CPU itself.
i have an intel processor and it has the MAX which does
prevent it from going higher (100C), but i'd like to keep it
at 70C or lower.
i've been trying to find anything that will let me set this
On 4/8/23 07:17, songbird wrote:
i have a program that has changed it's behavior to suddenly
become a CPU hog (while doing something simple like uploading
files for my website). probably a bug, but it got me to
wondering how i could limit the CPU temperature to a range
well below the ma
ected to a heat sink on
the side of a Streacom FC8 Alpha case. I use the xfce4-sensors-plugin to
monitor CPU package temperatures and thermald seems to do the job. My
config:
$ cat /etc/thermald/thermal-conf.xml
Passive control of CPU temperature
*
have a mini ARM server that does have a fan but the O/S (Armbian)
omitted to give it any fan controller so I wrote my own fan control service.
Based on CPU temperature I am able to switch the fan off or on and set
various operating speeds.
The great disappointment is that all through this recent
but no luck yet in my searches.
I installed 'thermald' to stop my CPUs hitting the max junction
temperature and hard resetting after a few minutes. I was quite
surprised that the standard kernel doesn't actually have thermal
protection which throttles CPU clocks and requires an external
userspace program to do this.
--
Tixy
Andrew M.A. Cater wrote:
...
> Maybe don't use FTP but use rsync - that way you can come back to it
> after a while and start again at the point you left off?
i have no control over what is listening at the other
end other than i sign on.
i can limit the FTP software to fewer connections and
Jeffrey Walton wrote:
>> What would happen, if we started a political movement based
>> on nationalism and Unix?
>>
>> What would be the first thing we would do when we get
>> installed as government?
>
> Annex the Netherlands, and take control of ASML.
> Annex Taiwan, and take control of TSMC.
I
On Sat, Apr 8, 2023 at 1:29 PM Emanuel Berg wrote:
>
> >> I recommend to go fanless whenever possible.
> >> Computers should be silent.
> >
> > Yeah, optimally ...
>
> What would happen, if we started a political movement based on
> nationalism and Unix?
>
> What would be the first thing we would
>> I recommend to go fanless whenever possible.
>> Computers should be silent.
>
> Yeah, optimally ...
What would happen, if we started a political movement based on
nationalism and Unix?
What would be the first thing we would do when we get
installed as government?
Maybe close the border or som
Stefan Monnier wrote:
> I recommend to go fanless whenever possible.
> Computers should be silent.
Yeah, optimally ...
--
underground experts united
https://dataswamp.org/~incal
> i have a very tiny fan and heatsink that is right on
> the processor. the rest of the system is fanless (no
> fan for the PSU - no fancy GPU needed for what i do).
> i almost bought a bigger heatsink so that the entire
> thing could run without the fan, but the small fan
> provided with the CP
On Sat, Apr 08, 2023 at 11:43:53AM -0400, songbird wrote:
> tv.debian wrote:
> ...
> > Also modern cpu do not suffer from high temperatures as much as the cpu
> > of yore, they use up all the thermal headroom they have, then throttle
> > the frequency/power to stay at that level. Of course the re
t...@myposts.ovh wrote:
...
> By using a fanner?
well-trained chipmunk?
songbird
Jeremy Nicoll wrote:
> On Sat, 8 Apr 2023, at 15:26, songbird wrote:
>> songbird wrote:
>> ...
>>> i've been trying to find anything that will let me set this
>>> but no luck yet in my searches.
>
> Surely you don't need to set a temperature lim
On Sat, 8 Apr 2023, at 16:39, songbird wrote:
> only with this change to the FTP software has it become
> an annoyance that made me go look for a way to deal with
> it.
>
> filing a bug against the FTP software is also something
> i should do, but i've not gotten that far yet. ;)
Meantime, w
tv.debian wrote:
...
> Also modern cpu do not suffer from high temperatures as much as the cpu
> of yore, they use up all the thermal headroom they have, then throttle
> the frequency/power to stay at that level. Of course the rest of the
> system has to deal with the residual heat as well if it
Emanuel Berg wrote:
...
> But install fans and see if you still get high temperatures if
> you didn't (?) ...
i have a very tiny fan and heatsink that is right on
the processor. the rest of the system is fanless (no
fan for the PSU - no fancy GPU needed for what i do).
i almost bought a bigger
davidson wrote:
...
> I would do
>
> $ man -k limit
>
> and see what looked interesting. prlimit(1) looks like it has a lot of
> switches.
ok, thanks will look at that too. :)
songbird
On Sat, 8 Apr 2023 Jeremy Nicoll wrote:
On Sat, 8 Apr 2023, at 15:26, songbird wrote:
songbird wrote:
...
i've been trying to find anything that will let me set this
but no luck yet in my searches.
Surely you don't need to set a temperature limit? If you
do, the cpu will stil
songbird wrote:
> i have a program that has changed it's behavior to suddenly
> become a CPU hog (while doing something simple like
> uploading files for my website). probably a bug, but it got
> me to wondering how i could limit the CPU temperature to
> a range well below th
On Sat, 8 Apr 2023, at 15:26, songbird wrote:
> songbird wrote:
> ...
>> i've been trying to find anything that will let me set this
>> but no luck yet in my searches.
Surely you don't need to set a temperature limit? If you
do, the cpu will still run (far too mu
reboot
at the moment to check that. will check later.
songbird
Hello, yes most motherboard bios will let you do that, also you may be
able to play with frequency boost and other advanced features that
greatly impact cpu temperature. Utilities like cpupower (cpupower-gui)
can allow yo
songbird wrote:
...
> i've been trying to find anything that will let me set this
> but no luck yet in my searches.
...
of course the moment i send the message it comes to me that
perhaps the BIOS will let me do this, but i don't want to reboot
at the moment to check that. will check later
On 2023-04-08 22:17, songbird wrote:
i have a program that has changed it's behavior to suddenly
become a CPU hog (while doing something simple like uploading
files for my website). probably a bug, but it got me to
wondering how i could limit the CPU temperature to a range
well belo
i have a program that has changed it's behavior to suddenly
become a CPU hog (while doing something simple like uploading
files for my website). probably a bug, but it got me to
wondering how i could limit the CPU temperature to a range
well below the maximum that kicks in by the CPU i
When I run Psensor to monitor the CPU temperature of my Buster platform,
it fails to auto-range the temperature.
I get the same error messages, regardless if I open Psensor as either a
user or root.
comp@AbNormal:~$ sudo -s psensor
[sudo] password for comp:
[2019-11-02T10:25:17] [ERR
On 03/04/2019 09:02 AM, Alexander V. Makartsev wrote:
On 04.03.2019 18:35, Stephen P. Molnar wrote:
How is the Psensor chart temperature range set?
Temperature range is set dynamically by sensor readings, for entire
graph duration.
You can set graph duration in Preferences > Graph.
--
W
On 04.03.2019 18:35, Stephen P. Molnar wrote:
> How is the Psensor chart temperature range set?
>
Temperature range is set dynamically by sensor readings, for entire
graph duration.
You can set graph duration in Preferences > Graph.
--
With kindest regards, Alexander.
⢀⣴⠾⠻⢶⣦⠀
⣾⠁⢠⠒⠀
How is the Psensor chart temperature range set?
--
Stephen P. Molnar, Ph.D.
Consultant
www.molecular-modeling.net
(614)312-7528 (c)
Skype: smolnar1
On 05/23/2018 04:25 PM, David wrote:
On 23 May 2018 at 20:45, Richard Owlett wrote:
Today I searched Synaptic for "mate sensors" and then installed "MATE
Sensors Applet". It runs.
HOWEVER, seven of the twelve values displayed are 0 degrees C. I assume that
only means that there is physically
On 23 May 2018 at 20:45, Richard Owlett wrote:
>
> Today I searched Synaptic for "mate sensors" and then installed "MATE
> Sensors Applet". It runs.
>
> HOWEVER, seven of the twelve values displayed are 0 degrees C. I assume that
> only means that there is physically no sensor to monitor on this l
s. I can't find documentation or hints that
> this is possible.
>
> Is it?
> Any suggestions as to what I might have been using? {I have used
> only Gnome2 and MATE as DE.}
Take a look in /sys/class/thermal, likely /sys/class/thermal/thermal_zone*
Temperature: temp, of what: type.
Cheers,
David.
Some time back on a different laptop and an older release (Wheezy???) I
had run something which displayed temperatures on the Panel.
Today I searched Synaptic for "mate sensors" and then installed "MATE
Sensors Applet". It runs.
HOWEVER, seven of the twelve values displayed are 0 degrees C. I
On 01/08/2018 04:57 PM, Roberto C. Sánchez wrote:
Hi all,
This is semi-OT but I am curious to know what temperature/humidity/flood
sensors everyone out there has experience with.
I am looking for something to use at home, but I would like to stay away
from WiFi and smart home devices
Hi all,
This is semi-OT but I am curious to know what temperature/humidity/flood
sensors everyone out there has experience with.
I am looking for something to use at home, but I would like to stay away
from WiFi and smart home devices. Basically, I am looking for something
simple, which plugs
On Wed, Nov 29, 2017 at 01:34:41AM +0500, Alexander V. Makartsev wrote:
On 28.11.2017 20:32, Michael Stone wrote:
On Mon, Nov 27, 2017 at 05:41:10PM +0500, Alexander V. Makartsev wrote:
Found unknown chip with ID 0x8628
https://github.com/groeck/it87/issues/5
Mike Stone
Who
On 28.11.2017 20:32, Michael Stone wrote:
> On Mon, Nov 27, 2017 at 05:41:10PM +0500, Alexander V. Makartsev wrote:
>> Found unknown chip with ID 0x8628
>
> https://github.com/groeck/it87/issues/5
>
> Mike Stone
Who knew it is simple like that.
I wonder now if I should file a bug on "lm-sensors"
On Mon, Nov 27, 2017 at 05:41:10PM +0500, Alexander V. Makartsev wrote:
Found unknown chip with ID 0x8628
https://github.com/groeck/it87/issues/5
Mike Stone
Hello everyone.
The goal I trying to accomplish is to have full temperature monitoring
and speed control of PWM fans.
I have somewhat modern hardware. Here is partial output from
"sensors-detect" (lm-sensors package):
$ sudo sensors-detect
# sensors-detect revision 6284 (2015-05-3
On Thu, 05 Oct 2017 12:11:33 -0400, "Stephen P. Molnar"
wrote:
>Is there a way to log the time and temperature data for the CPU from the
>xsensors app?
>
>Or, a;alternately, is there an app that will allow me to save the CPU
>core time temperature results?
>
>
to...@tuxteam.de wrote:
> An attempt at a translation:
>
> It seems to me that munin has agents based on sensors to monitor
> temperatures. Nagios (and thus everything using the same probes,
> like icinga) should have them too.
thanks tomas ...
I was thinking nagios is a bit too big for simple
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
On Thu, Oct 05, 2017 at 10:07:30PM +0200, Erwan David wrote:
[...]
> Il me semble que munin a des agents basés sur sensors pour monitorer les
> températures. Nagios (et donc tout ce qui utilise les mêmes capteurs
> comme icinga) doit aussi en avoir
Le 10/05/17 à 21:59, Michael Stone a écrit :
> On Thu, Oct 05, 2017 at 09:51:41PM +0200, deloptes wrote:
>> Stephen P. Molnar wrote:
>>
>>> Is there a way to log the time and temperature data for the CPU from the
>>> xsensors app?
>>>
>>> Or, a
On Thu, Oct 05, 2017 at 09:51:41PM +0200, deloptes wrote:
Stephen P. Molnar wrote:
Is there a way to log the time and temperature data for the CPU from the
xsensors app?
Or, a;alternately, is there an app that will allow me to save the CPU
core time temperature results?
Thanks in advance
Stephen P. Molnar wrote:
> Is there a way to log the time and temperature data for the CPU from the
> xsensors app?
>
> Or, a;alternately, is there an app that will allow me to save the CPU
> core time temperature results?
>
> Thanks in advance.
I'm wondering what h
On 10/05/2017 12:00 PM, Reco wrote:
Hi.
On Thu, Oct 05, 2017 at 12:11:33PM -0400, Stephen P. Molnar wrote:
Is there a way to log the time and temperature data for the CPU from the
xsensors app?
Or, a;alternately, is there an app that will allow me to save the CPU core
time temperature
Hi.
On Thu, Oct 05, 2017 at 12:11:33PM -0400, Stephen P. Molnar wrote:
> Is there a way to log the time and temperature data for the CPU from the
> xsensors app?
>
> Or, a;alternately, is there an app that will allow me to save the CPU core
> time temperature results?
/
Is there a way to log the time and temperature data for the CPU from the
xsensors app?
Or, a;alternately, is there an app that will allow me to save the CPU
core time temperature results?
Thanks in advance.
--
Stephen P. Molnar, Ph.D.Life is a fuzzy set
www.molecular
Hi,
My system (kernel / mcelog) frequently (numerous times a day) spits out
warnings such as these:
Feb 20 21:10:07 lila kernel: [ 7808.093821] CPU1: Core temperature above
threshold, cpu clock throttled (total events = 1760)
Feb 20 21:10:07 lila kernel: [ 7808.093832] CPU0: Core temperature
On Sat, Nov 08, 2014 at 02:56:02PM +1030, Arthur Marsh wrote:
> I finally upgraded my other pc to KDE 4.14.2, and am looking for a
> temperature display for the hard disks, CPU, video card and motherboard.
>
> It needs to show actual temperatures and also have some labell
I finally upgraded my other pc to KDE 4.14.2, and am looking for a
temperature display for the hard disks, CPU, video card and motherboard.
It needs to show actual temperatures and also have some labelling of
which temperature is for what device.
Any suggestions?
--
To UNSUBSCRIBE, email
On Wed, 16 Jul 2014 21:06:50 -0700
Marc Shapiro wrote:
> On 07/16/2014 07:42 PM, B wrote:
> > On Wed, 16 Jul 2014 19:24:01 -0700
> > Marc Shapiro wrote:
…
> > Install a widget that graphically display CPU(s) usage.
> Psensors does this. Top also gives CPU usage.
PLS, insert a blank line wh
ASA the machine's
booted. Also check your wife's temperature, you never know.
Shutting down my daughter's instance of Firefox, with a flash game
running, had an immediate and dramatic effect on the temperature. Within
about 4 minutes the temps had dropped 15 - 20 C and after a few
ionally, the temperatures are constantly spiking.
If they're spiking, it's because "something"'s pushing
them up; apart from the widget, conduct an investigation
from the cold to the hot with top opened ASA the machine's
booted. Also check your wife's temperatu
On 07/14/2014 10:31 PM, Marc Shapiro wrote:
On 07/14/2014 07:58 PM, B wrote:
On Mon, 14 Jul 2014 19:15:27 -0700
Marc Shapiro wrote:
lm-sensors sometimes needs tweaking (formulas to get the
right temperature(s)).
My motherboard is a Gigabyte 970A0-DS3.
Are you sure about that, searching
On Mon, 14 Jul 2014 22:31:40 -0700
Marc Shapiro wrote:
> Gigabyte 970A-DS3
The first result of a research directly drives
to a sensors3.conf file.
--
The big difference between sex for money and sex for free is that
sex for money usually costs a lot less. -- Brendan Francis
signature.asc
Des
On 07/14/2014 07:58 PM, B wrote:
On Mon, 14 Jul 2014 19:15:27 -0700
Marc Shapiro wrote:
lm-sensors sometimes needs tweaking (formulas to get the
right temperature(s)).
My motherboard is a Gigabyte 970A0-DS3.
Are you sure about that, searching: gigabyte 970A0-DS3
doesn't return re
nd on what board, so I know what to replace?
This is on the CPU itself, and if the documentation in
https://www.kernel.org/doc/Documentation/hwmon/k10temp
is to be believed, it's not actually a physical temperature.
Everything else looked OK to me, but if the machine isn't actually
On Mon, 14 Jul 2014 19:15:27 -0700
Marc Shapiro wrote:
lm-sensors sometimes needs tweaking (formulas to get the
right temperature(s)).
> My motherboard is a Gigabyte 970A0-DS3.
Are you sure about that, searching: gigabyte 970A0-DS3
doesn't return results (look at the silkscreen pri
My system has been shutting itself down recently. Today it did so
while my wife was using the computer and she reports that the box was
"quite warm" above the power supply. She left the system powered down
so I could check things out myself. When I got home I cleared a small
amount of dust
434875] thinkpad_acpi:
>> temperatures (Celsius): 87 42 33 62 50 N/A 34 N/A 40 46 56 N/A N/A N/A
>> N/A N/A
>> Aug 10 23:05:57 curiosity kernel: [ 3601.435288] Critical temperature
>> reached (103 C), shutting down.
>> Aug 10 23:05:57 curiosity shutdown[4494]: shuttin
On Tue, Aug 13, 2013 at 6:02 PM, Tom Grace
wrote:
> On 13/08/13 13:19, Alphonse Ogulla wrote:
>>
>> The system is going down for system halt NOW!
>>
>> Regarding the canned air solution, is it a one-off job to clean out
>> the CPU heat sink or is it for a continuous circulation of air
>> directly
_control
> argument. Done that and I'm now able to set the fan speed. Many thanks
> for that.
>
> I've followed the instructions at
> https://github.com/theothertom/thinkpad-temp_mon and no sooner had I
> began testing in a another terminal, the laptop shutdown but strangel
rnel: [ 3601.434875] thinkpad_acpi:
> > temperatures (Celsius): 87 42 33 62 50 N/A 34 N/A 40 46 56 N/A N/A N/A
> > N/A N/A
> > Aug 10 23:05:57 curiosity kernel: [ 3601.435288] Critical temperature
> > reached (103 C), shutting down.
> > Aug 10 23:05:57 curiosity shutdow
0 N/A 34 N/A 40 46 56 N/A N/A N/A
> N/A N/A
> Aug 10 23:05:57 curiosity kernel: [ 3601.435288] Critical temperature
> reached (103 C), shutting down.
> Aug 10 23:05:57 curiosity shutdown[4494]: shutting down for system halt
Hm, why does the list of temperatures not include the cited 103
On 13/08/13 13:19, Alphonse Ogulla wrote:
The system is going down for system halt NOW!
Regarding the canned air solution, is it a one-off job to clean out
the CPU heat sink or is it for a continuous circulation of air
directly over the heat sink?
It's for a one off, it gets the dust out from t
began testing in a another terminal, the laptop shutdown but strangely
without any heavy lifting tasks running in the background.
Message from syslogd@curiosity at Aug 13 14:42:12 ...
kernel:[23090.974571] Critical temperature reached (103 C), shutting down.
Broadcast message from root@curiosit
On 13/08/13 10:02, Alphonse Ogulla wrote:
After a lot of googling, I decided to tear down the laptop, expose the
cooling fan and give it a good vacuum job to get rid of any dust that
might have accumulated and was possibly interfering with the CPU
cooling. I assembled all the pieces, rebooted an
: [ 3601.434875] thinkpad_acpi:
temperatures (Celsius): 87 42 33 62 50 N/A 34 N/A 40 46 56 N/A N/A N/A
N/A N/A
Aug 10 23:05:57 curiosity kernel: [ 3601.435288] Critical temperature
reached (103 C), shutting down.
Aug 10 23:05:57 curiosity shutdown[4494]: shutting down for system halt
After a lot of googling, I
Zhong Jiang wrote:
Hi,
I'm running Debian Squeeze on my Hp Pavilion dv6 dual boot laptop, and
am experiencing problems with the temperature readings produced by
lm-sensors:
root@debian:/home/zhong# sensors -f
k10temp-pci-00c3
Adapter: PCI adapter
temp1: +164.3°F (high = +15
gt; comments on their lines. So I removed most of comments and add values to
> them. I restart but that did not stop the temperature from rising.
>
> Maybe I'm asking the wrong person but wanted to know if you have a clue.
Please reply to the list. And yes, I am the "wrong
On 10/25/2012 12:06 AM, Zhong wrote:
> The problem is, high temperature readings only occur in Debian but not
> evident in Windows. So I suspect that it's not a hardware issue but due to my
> video card driver. CPU usage were low on debian despite the fan continually
> blew for
On 10/24/2012 8:54 AM, Zhong wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I'm not sure if this is the second time I've send you this message but
> regarding about my fan heating up, is there any known issue surrounding the
> Linux kernel on a similar problem such as mine?
>
> Because much of my research on this topic ei
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