On Thu, Apr 27, 2006 at 08:37:07PM +0200, Jean Delvare wrote: > Andrew, > > [Jean Delvare] > > > The result you have is consistent with the drivers you loaded (which in > > > turn sound OK for your hardware, I have a Dell Latitude D600 and I use > > > the same drivers.) The sensors program and libsensors library were > > > modified in lm_sensors 2.10.0 not to show non-sensors devices anymore > > > (at least for 2.6 kernels.) EEPROMs are not sensors so it didn't belong > > > there in the first place. > > [Andrew Pollock] > > FWIW, the D600 is a vastly different beast to the D610. I made that mistake > > when I bought it. > > Ah, didn't know that. I stupidly assumed that nearby numbering meant > nearby design. Me too :-( > [Andrew Pollock] > > So are you saying that given the drivers I've loaded, there's nothing to > > report on? > > Yes, that's what I think, and said. Okay. > Your best chance for hardware monitoring on this laptop is ACPI > (fan, ec and thermal). Load all available acpi modules and see > in /proc/acpi/{embedded_controller,fan,thermal_zone} if there's any > interesting data to be found. > > On my D600, embedded_controller and fan are empty directories, but > thermal_zone has some interesting files. I can get the system > temperature, a status flag and a critical temperature limit (which I can > also set). That's a bit cheap and inconvenient compared to what > lm_sensors can offer, but that's much better than nothing at all. Yup, I see the same. 66 degrees seems a bit hot to me. > There's some documentation available about acpi/thermal_zone here: > http://acpi.sourceforge.net/documentation/thermal.html Thanks. > Hope that helps, It's better than a poke in the eye. regards Andrew