Hi, > is it guaranteed that faulty sensors wont become operational later? > Also filtering out such sensors would make the support for the hwmon_temp_fault and > hwmon_fan_fault attributes meaningless. Good point. I can't be certain, but the MOF does seem to imply that sensors can indeed be faulty on just a temporary basis. I'll filter out only the sensors that are "Not Connected" at probe time. My thinking is, even if these might turn into connected sensors later, that would mean the user is e.g. hot-plugging a fan (!), and keeping them could result in a large number (~10 on my Z420) of pointless extra channels. And this would also match the behavior of HP's official utility. Does that seem reasonable? Or did you mean that I shouldn't filter, and leave disconnected sensors in like some other hwmon drivers do? > The sanity check for HP_WMI_NUMERIC_SENSOR_GUID is unnecessary, the WMI driver core already makes sure that your driver > is only matched with WMI devices containing HP_WMI_NUMERIC_SENSOR_GUID. > As for the sanity check regarding HP_WMI_BIOS_GUID: this WMI GUID is not used inside the driver. Since WMI GUIDs are expected > to be unique, checking for HP_WMI_BIOS_GUID (which AFAIK is used by the HP-BIOSCFG driver) without intending to use it is > meaningless. In that case, I'll gladly remove the checks. I was following the example of the platform/x86/hp-wmi driver, which checks for that GUID and another at module load. Thanks for reviewing. James