"Mark Knecht" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> posted
[EMAIL PROTECTED], excerpted
below, on  Sun, 08 Apr 2007 17:21:00 -0700:

> On 4/8/07, Christoph Mende <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>> On Sun, 2007-04-08 at 15:42 -0700, Mark Knecht wrote:
>> > Hi,
>> >    I have an Asus A8N-E motherboard which had a motherboard chipset
>> > fan go bad yesterday. After doing some reading I found many folks
>> > have had this same problem and switched successfully to Zalman
>> > passive heat sinks so I did the same thing today. The machine has
>> > been up for about 4 hours with no problems. So far so good....
>> >
>> > My question is how can I monitor chipset temp from my my desktop to
>> > watch this for awhile? If I drop into BIOS I see a temperature listed
>> > and had to turn off boot time warnings about the chipset fan going to
>> > slow so it seems the BIOS knows what's going on.
>> >
>> >    Is there a way for me to do this in Gnome?
>> >
>> > Thanks in advance,
>> > Mark
>>
>> emerge lm_sensors ;>
>> there's probably some plugin for gdesklets too, dunno if there's
>> something for the panel
>>
> Thanks. I'll go read about that.

As Christoph said, lm_sensors.  That's the low-level userland stuff.  
You'll need drivers for whatever sensor chips are on your mobo -- check 
the mobo specs and enable the correct ones in the kernel.  A very few 
might not be in the kernel yet, you'd have to merge them separately or as 
patches, but with the 2.6 kernels they've done quite well at keeping the 
sensors updated in the kernel mainline and add new ones regularly.

If you are lucky and/or did your homework and have a mobo from a 
manufacturer that's suitably Linux friendly, it's possible you'll be able 
to download a ready-made lm_sensors config from their site, just as one 
might download MSWormOS drivers.  I know Tyan does that with a lot of 
their boards, including the one I have -- one of the big reasons I went 
with Tyan.  Of course, mine's a $400+ dual Opteron server board, too.  
I'd not necessarily expect the same with a sub-$100 cheapie.

Once you have the kernel drivers and correct lm_sensors config setup, 
you'll probably want a front-end for it as well.  Here, I just use 
ksysguard, which sees the lm_sensors stuff and offers it for display.  
There's ksensors as well, and I believe Super-Karumba desktop applets for 
it as well, on the KDE side.  I understand there are gdesklets and the 
like on the GNOME side, but don't use it so wouldn't have a clue on that, 
other than what I've happened to read from time to time.

-- 
Duncan - List replies preferred.   No HTML msgs.
"Every nonfree program has a lord, a master --
and if you use the program, he is your master."  Richard Stallman

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