(Sent to the list without subscribing.) I have a machine at home with an ECS AMD690GM-M2 motherboard. sensors-detect said this: Driver `it87' (should be inserted): Detects correctly: * ISA bus, address 0x228 Chip `ITE IT8726F Super IO Sensors' (confidence: 9) Letting sensors-detect do its thing resulted in sensors showing this: it8716-isa-0228 Adapter: ISA adapter VCore: +1.25 V (min = +0.00 V, max = +4.08 V) VDDR: +1.23 V (min = +1.28 V, max = +1.68 V) ALARM +3.3V: +1.87 V (min = +2.78 V, max = +3.78 V) ALARM +5V: +4.89 V (min = +4.49 V, max = +5.48 V) +12V: +4.86 V (min = +9.98 V, max = +13.95 V) ALARM in5: +2.48 V (min = +0.58 V, max = +1.34 V) ALARM in6: +1.81 V (min = +1.04 V, max = +1.36 V) ALARM 5VSB: +4.73 V (min = +4.49 V, max = +5.48 V) VBat: +2.99 V CPU Fan: 3443 RPM (min = 10 RPM) fan2: 0 RPM (min = 10 RPM) ALARM fan3: 0 RPM (min = 0 RPM) CPU Temp: +16.0 C (low = +127.0 C, high = +75.0 C) sensor = thermal diode M/B Temp: +127.0 C (low = +127.0 C, high = +75.0 C) ALARM sensor = thermal diode cpu0_vid: +1.000 V Some of those values are presumably way off. At least I don't think the machine would be running with +12V of 4.86V. Here is the relevant section of sensors3.conf: chip "it8716-*" # Voltages label in0 "VCore" label in1 "VDDR" label in2 "+3.3V" # VCC3 label in3 "+5V" # VCC label in4 "+12V" # label in5 "-12V" # label in6 "-5V" label in7 "5VSB" # VCCH label in8 "VBat" compute in3 ((6.8/10)+1)*@ , @/((6.8/10)+1) compute in4 ((30/10)+1)*@ , @/((30/10)+1) # compute in5 (1+232/56)*@ - 4.096*232/56 , (@ + 4.096*232/56)/(1+232/56) # compute in6 (1+120/56)*@ - 4.096*120/56 , (@ + 4.096*120/56)/(1+120/56) compute in7 ((6.8/10)+1)*@ , @/((6.8/10)+1) # If vid (nominal CPU voltage) isn't correct, hardcode the correct value # instead. # set in0_min cpu0_vid * 0.95 # set in0_max cpu0_vid * 1.05 # set in1_min 1.8 * 0.95 # set in1_max 1.8 * 1.05 # set in2_min 3.3 * 0.95 # set in2_max 3.3 * 1.05 # set in3_min 5 * 0.95 # set in3_max 5 * 1.05 # set in4_min 12 * 0.95 # set in4_max 12 * 1.05 # set in5_max -12 * 0.95 # set in5_min -12 * 1.05 # set in6_max -5 * 0.95 # set in6_min -5 * 1.05 # set in7_min 5 * 0.95 # set in7_max 5 * 1.05 # The chip does not support in8 min/max # Temperatures # If you are lucky, the BIOS has set the proper sensor types for you. # If your temperature readings are completely whacky you probably # need to change the sensor types. Adujst and uncomment the # appropriate lines below. # # 2 = thermistor; 3 = thermal diode; 0 = unused # set temp1_type 3 # set temp2_type 3 # set temp3_type 3 # If a given sensor isn't used, you will probably want to ignore it # as well (see ignore statement right below). # The CPU sensor can be any of temp1, temp2 or temp3 - it's motherboard # dependent. Same for the motherboard temperature. label temp1 "CPU Temp" label temp2 "M/B Temp" ignore temp3 # set temp1_max 60 # set temp1_min 10 # set temp2_max 50 # set temp2_min 10 # Fans # The CPU fan can be any of fan1, fan2 or fan3 - it's motherboard # dependent. Same for the case fan. label fan1 "CPU Fan" # label fan2 "Case Fan" # ignore fan3 # set fan1_min 2000 # set fan2_min 2000 Kernel is from ubuntu 8.10, 2.6.27-11-generic. Sensors is 3.0.2 Any suggestions for improving these readings? Thanks, David Mathog _______________________________________________ lm-sensors mailing list lm-sensors@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx http://lists.lm-sensors.org/mailman/listinfo/lm-sensors