On Mon, Dec 02, 2013 at 08:23:15PM +0100, Thomas Raschbacher wrote: > On 2013-12-02 19:10, Guenter Roeck wrote: > >On Mon, Dec 02, 2013 at 10:49:24AM +0100, Thomas Raschbacher wrote: > >>Hi. > >> > >>I get rather strange values for temperature ranges: > >> > >>it8721-isa-0290 > >>Adapter: ISA adapter > >>in0: +2.84 V (min = +1.54 V, max = +0.84 V) ALARM > >>in1: +2.80 V (min = +1.33 V, max = +0.54 V) ALARM > >>in2: +1.02 V (min = +0.56 V, max = +1.86 V) > >>+3.3V: +3.24 V (min = +4.58 V, max = +5.95 V) ALARM > >>in4: +2.05 V (min = +2.66 V, max = +0.91 V) ALARM > >>in5: +2.50 V (min = +1.51 V, max = +1.67 V) ALARM > >>in6: +1.80 V (min = +1.09 V, max = +2.27 V) > >>3VSB: +0.70 V (min = +4.56 V, max = +4.46 V) ALARM > >>Vbat: +3.34 V > >>fan1: 2213 RPM (min = 12 RPM) > >>fan2: 1336 RPM (min = 13 RPM) > >>fan3: 1300 RPM (min = 12 RPM) > >>temp1: +45.0 C (low = -36.0 C, high = -36.0 C) ALARM > >>sensor = thermistor > >>temp2: +51.0 C (low = +91.0 C, high = -93.0 C) ALARM > >>sensor = thermistor > >>temp3: -128.0 C (low = -11.0 C, high = +94.0 C) sensor = > >>disabled > >>intrusion0: OK > >> > >>How can I fix this? > >> > >Did you try setting the limits via /etc/sensors3.conf and 'sensors > >-s' ? > > > >Thanks, > >Guenter > > Not yet as I do not know what to set exactly. any clue as to how to > find out what would be sensible values? > One of the sensors is likely the CPU. If you load the temp sensor driver for it you should see its limits; alternatively, check the CPU datasheet. The other sensor is likely the board temperature; its limits should be available in the product datasheet. For testing, you can put in something reasonable like a minimum of 0 degrees C and a maximum of 80 or 90 degrees C. Guenter _______________________________________________ lm-sensors mailing list lm-sensors@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx http://lists.lm-sensors.org/mailman/listinfo/lm-sensors