On Sunday 30 September 2001 23:41, Oden Eriksson wrote: > söndagen den 30 september 2001 23.02 skrev Peter Ruskin: > > On Sunday 30 September 2001 21:50, Greg Sarsons wrote: > > > Peter Ruskin wrote: > > > > On Sunday 30 September 2001 21:09, Tim McKenzie wrote: > > > > > > I'm getting the same thing. In demo I see the temp and the fan > > > > > > in with the CPU info. Interesting, if I enable the fan pluging > > > > > > I get nothing additional. Enabling or disabling the plugins > > > > > > causes seg faults at times. Not sure what is causing it. > > > > > > > > > > > > BTW I'm using an ABIT KT7-Raid motherboard with an AMD > > > > > > Thunderbird 800. > > > > > > > > > > > > Greg > > > > > > > > > > I get the same on an Asus board... No info and occasional > > > > > segfaults. Other than that, I'd have to say 8.1 is great. I've > > > > > already corrupted several Windows users. ;) I might try hunting > > > > > down the source for the plugin and try recompiling it later... > > > > > > > > > > Tim > > > > > > > > You have to have lm-utils installed, then run sensors-detect as > > > > root. Once you have sensors detected and configured, reboot, then > > > > right-click on gkrellm and configure. > > > > > > Unfortunately, that is what I did. Installed lm_utils, then ran > > > sensors-detect and tried to configure gkrellm. No fan, no nothing. > > > Now again try it as -demo and it works. Unfortunately, I can't save > > > the data so every time I restart I have to config gkrellm. > > > > > > Greg > > > > I don't understand that. When you run sensors in a console, does that > > display the values? If not, look at /etc/sensors.conf (I think it's > > called). > > As I come to think about it, the "sensors-detect" utility does not seem > to insmod the suitable modules automatically any more. Anyone else that > can confirm this? > > (I have a Abit BP6 mobo)
No, AFAIK it never did. At the end of the sensors-detect run it gives you a list of stuff for _you_ to add to modules.conf and rc.local. You have to modify these files accordingly, reboot to get them actioned, then run `sensors` to check the results. If any of the values look silly (compared to the values your bios reports), you can adjust scaling factors in sensors.conf. (man sensors.conf). -- Peter Ruskin, Wrexham, Wales. Registered Linux User No. 219434 ( see http://counter.li.org/ ). Mandrake Linux release 8.1 (Vitamin) for i586, kernel 2.4.8-26mdk. XFree86 4.1.0, patch level 17mdk. KDE: 2.2.1. Qt: 2.3.1. Uptime: 1:13