On 2/26/2010 10:46 AM, Paul Heinlein wrote: > >>> >>>> Does anyone know of a cheap temperature sensor that will work with >>>> Linux? I don't need a fancy monitoring appliance, I just want a >>>> simple sensor that I can connect to one of my monitoring servers >>>> to let me know if the server room is getting hot >>>> >>> There is a good chance that lm-sensors supports your servers with >>> no additional hardware needed. To configure lm-sensors, run >>> 'sensors-detect' as root. If your cpu/motherboard is supported you >>> will be able to read system temps directly either using SNMP or by >>> scraping 'sensors' output. >> >> I'm looking for room temperature, not case temperature. > > Some hardware provides SNMP-addressable information on the temperature > of inbound air, not just case temperature. I realize that inbound > temperature is not exactly the same as room temp, but it's a pretty > good approximation in many case. Yes, are you really that concerned about whether people in the room are comfortable - they'll tell someone if they aren't even without gadgets. If the room is getting hot, so will the equipment, so internal sensors will show the trend, just offset by a bit of equipment heat. Most Cisco equipment and higher end UPS's will have SNMP readable sensors that monitoring programs can read, graph, and alarm on thresholds, and I believe you can enable them on linux servers with the right snmpd.conf settings. -- Les Mikesell lesmikesell@xxxxxxxxx _______________________________________________ CentOS mailing list CentOS@xxxxxxxxxx http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos