Re: [gentoo-user] Re: heat codes

2015-03-13 Thread Mick
On Friday 13 Mar 2015 00:38:56 Dale wrote:
 James wrote:
  Mick michaelkintzios at gmail.com writes:
  # sensors
  radeon-pci-0100
  Adapter: PCI adapter
  temp1:+36.0°C  (crit = +120.0°C, hyst = +90.0°C)
  fam15h_power-pci-00c4
  Adapter: PCI adapter
  power1:   19.97 W  (crit = 125.19 W)
  
  k10temp-pci-00c3
  Adapter: PCI adapter
  temp1:+24.9°C  (high = +70.0°C)
  
 (crit = +90.0°C, hyst = +87.0°C)
  
  There should be more after these, showing your voltages and various MoBo
  sensors.  Can you check that it87 is actually loaded?  lsmod will tell
  you.
  
  Oh, I just noticed this posting; Dale's latest posting caused me to
  look at the thread again.
  
  rc-status shows lm_sensors running, as does ps.
  
  but  lsmod  is empty:
  Module  Size  Used by
  
  /etc/conf.d/lm_sensors shows:
  
  MODULE_0=fam15h_power
  MODULE_1=it87
  MODULE_2=k10temp
  
  
  I think I have it 'compiled in'. Are you sure I should be
  seeing more information?
  
  GA-990FXA-UD3 is the mobo.
  
  
  James
 
 I have a 970A-UD3P mobo and I use this under Hardware Monitoring support:
 
 AMD Family 10h+ temperature sensor
 AMD Family 15h processor power
 ITE IT87xx and compatibles
 
 Under bus support:
 
 Intel PIIX4 and compatible (ATI/AMD/Serverworks/Broadcom/SMSC)
 
 Our mobo isn't exactly the same but if they use the same chips, those
 should get you all the info you need.
 
 I might add, I build everything into the kernel and I don't even install
 lm_sensors. I haven't installed that in ages.
 
 Hope that helps.
 
 Dale
 
 :-)  :-)

I don't have the same MoBo and have compiled my corresponding chipset sensor 
driver as a module.  It doesn't load unless I manually modprobe it or set it 
up in /etc/conf.d/modules.  This is how many readings I get:

$ sensors
radeon-pci-0008 
Adapter: PCI adapter 
temp1:+37.0°C  (crit = +120.0°C, hyst = +90.0°C) 

k10temp-pci-00c3 
Adapter: PCI adapter 
temp1:+36.8°C  (high = +70.0°C) 
   (crit = +70.0°C, hyst = +69.0°C) 

fam15h_power-pci-00c4 
Adapter: PCI adapter 
power1:   N/A  (crit =  95.09 W) 

nct6791-isa-0290 
Adapter: ISA adapter 
in0:+1.38 V  (min =  +0.00 V, max =  +1.74 V) 
in1:+1.03 V  (min =  +0.00 V, max =  +0.00 V)  ALARM 
in2:+3.34 V  (min =  +0.00 V, max =  +0.00 V)  ALARM 
in3:+3.34 V  (min =  +0.00 V, max =  +0.00 V)  ALARM 
in4:+1.01 V  (min =  +0.00 V, max =  +0.00 V)  ALARM 
in5:+2.04 V  (min =  +0.00 V, max =  +0.00 V)  ALARM 
in6:+0.28 V  (min =  +0.00 V, max =  +0.00 V)  ALARM 
in7:+3.44 V  (min =  +0.00 V, max =  +0.00 V)  ALARM 
in8:+3.33 V  (min =  +0.00 V, max =  +0.00 V)  ALARM 
in9:+0.00 V  (min =  +0.00 V, max =  +0.00 V) 
in10:   +0.17 V  (min =  +0.00 V, max =  +0.00 V)  ALARM 
in11:   +0.17 V  (min =  +0.00 V, max =  +0.00 V)  ALARM 
in12:   +1.01 V  (min =  +0.00 V, max =  +0.00 V)  ALARM 
in13:   +1.03 V  (min =  +0.00 V, max =  +0.00 V)  ALARM 
in14:   +0.21 V  (min =  +0.00 V, max =  +0.00 V)  ALARM 
fan1:  1036 RPM  (min =0 RPM) 
fan2:  1695 RPM  (min =0 RPM) 
fan3:  1001 RPM  (min =0 RPM) 
SYSTIN: +31.0°C  (high =  +0.0°C, hyst =  +0.0°C)  ALARM  
sensor = thermistor 
CPUTIN: +47.0°C  (high = +80.0°C, hyst = +75.0°C)  sensor = 
thermistor 
AUXTIN0:   +106.0°Csensor = thermistor 
AUXTIN1:   +105.0°Csensor = thermistor 
AUXTIN2:   +105.0°Csensor = thermistor 
AUXTIN3:   +106.0°Csensor = thermistor 
PCH_CHIP_CPU_MAX_TEMP:   +0.0°C 
PCH_CHIP_TEMP:   +0.0°C 
PCH_CPU_TEMP:+0.0°C 
PCH_MCH_TEMP:+0.0°C 
intrusion0:ALARM 
intrusion1:ALARM 
beep_enable:   disabled

HTH.
-- 
Regards,
Mick


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Re: [gentoo-user] Re: heat codes

2015-03-13 Thread Peter Humphrey
On Thursday 12 March 2015 19:38:56 Dale wrote:

 I build everything into the kernel and I don't even install
 lm_sensors. I haven't installed that in ages.

Does that mean that your gkrellm can't display temperatures?

-- 
Rgds
Peter.




Re: [gentoo-user] Re: heat codes

2015-03-13 Thread Dale
Tuomo Hartikainen wrote:
 On 150312 1835, Dale wrote:
 waben...@gmail.com wrote:
 Something similar happened to me. I accidentally pressed F6 while
 focused gkrellm but didn't noticed it. Some time later I realized that
 the fontsize of gkrellm was increased so that it's height doesn't fit
 to the screen anymore. Fist I thought that it has something to do with
 the latest update. It took some time till I recognized that I simply
 had to press F7 to restore the fontsize to its former height. :-)

 --
 Regards
 wabe

 Well, you should have seen the look on my face the other day when
 Firefox went FULL SCREEN.  I mean full screen like it does when I hit F
 and am watching a video.  Heck, I didn't have a menu at the top,  To
 this day, I have no clue what I did.  I was typing a comment on a social
 site and all of the sudden, it went sucky.  Still no clue but thank
 goodness it fixed itself after I killed it and restarted. 

 Dale
 Try pressing F11 in Firefox? ;)

I think I tried that.  I think I tried all the F* keys.  I was also able
to ctrl F* to get to another desktop and use a second browser to try and
figure the thing out.  I tried a few things I found online but none of
them worked.  Also weird, I was typing normal characters when it went
weird on me just like I am in this email.  No ctrl, alt or other keys. 
The closest I got to those was the shift key for capitol letters. 

I just hope I never run into that again.  o_O 

Dale

:-)  :-) 



Re: [gentoo-user] Re: heat codes

2015-03-13 Thread Dale
Mick wrote:



 I don't have the same MoBo and have compiled my corresponding chipset
sensor
 driver as a module.  It doesn't load unless I manually modprobe it or
set it
 up in /etc/conf.d/modules.  This is how many readings I get:

 $ sensors
 radeon-pci-0008
 Adapter: PCI adapter
 temp1:+37.0°C  (crit = +120.0°C, hyst = +90.0°C)

 k10temp-pci-00c3
 Adapter: PCI adapter
 temp1:+36.8°C  (high = +70.0°C)
(crit = +70.0°C, hyst = +69.0°C)

 fam15h_power-pci-00c4
 Adapter: PCI adapter
 power1:   N/A  (crit =  95.09 W)

 nct6791-isa-0290
 Adapter: ISA adapter
 in0:+1.38 V  (min =  +0.00 V, max =  +1.74 V)
 in1:+1.03 V  (min =  +0.00 V, max =  +0.00 V)  ALARM
 in2:+3.34 V  (min =  +0.00 V, max =  +0.00 V)  ALARM
 in3:+3.34 V  (min =  +0.00 V, max =  +0.00 V)  ALARM
 in4:+1.01 V  (min =  +0.00 V, max =  +0.00 V)  ALARM
 in5:+2.04 V  (min =  +0.00 V, max =  +0.00 V)  ALARM
 in6:+0.28 V  (min =  +0.00 V, max =  +0.00 V)  ALARM
 in7:+3.44 V  (min =  +0.00 V, max =  +0.00 V)  ALARM
 in8:+3.33 V  (min =  +0.00 V, max =  +0.00 V)  ALARM
 in9:+0.00 V  (min =  +0.00 V, max =  +0.00 V)
 in10:   +0.17 V  (min =  +0.00 V, max =  +0.00 V)  ALARM
 in11:   +0.17 V  (min =  +0.00 V, max =  +0.00 V)  ALARM
 in12:   +1.01 V  (min =  +0.00 V, max =  +0.00 V)  ALARM
 in13:   +1.03 V  (min =  +0.00 V, max =  +0.00 V)  ALARM
 in14:   +0.21 V  (min =  +0.00 V, max =  +0.00 V)  ALARM
 fan1:  1036 RPM  (min =0 RPM)
 fan2:  1695 RPM  (min =0 RPM)
 fan3:  1001 RPM  (min =0 RPM)
 SYSTIN: +31.0°C  (high =  +0.0°C, hyst =  +0.0°C)  ALARM 
 sensor = thermistor
 CPUTIN: +47.0°C  (high = +80.0°C, hyst = +75.0°C) 
sensor =
 thermistor
 AUXTIN0:   +106.0°Csensor = thermistor
 AUXTIN1:   +105.0°Csensor = thermistor
 AUXTIN2:   +105.0°Csensor = thermistor
 AUXTIN3:   +106.0°Csensor = thermistor
 PCH_CHIP_CPU_MAX_TEMP:   +0.0°C
 PCH_CHIP_TEMP:   +0.0°C
 PCH_CPU_TEMP:+0.0°C
 PCH_MCH_TEMP:+0.0°C
 intrusion0:ALARM
 intrusion1:ALARM
 beep_enable:   disabled

 HTH.


I get things like this:

root@fireball / # ls -al /sys/devices/platform/it87.552/
total 0
drwxr-xr-x  4 root root0 Mar 11 19:25 .
drwxr-xr-x 12 root root0 Mar 11 19:25 ..
-r--r--r--  1 root root 4096 Mar 13 06:16 alarms
lrwxrwxrwx  1 root root0 Mar 11 19:25 driver -
../../../bus/platform/drivers/it87
-rw-r--r--  1 root root 4096 Mar 13 06:16 driver_override
-r--r--r--  1 root root 4096 Mar 13 06:16 fan1_alarm
-rw-r--r--  1 root root 4096 Mar  4 15:11 fan1_beep
-r--r--r--  1 root root 4096 Mar 11 19:26 fan1_input
-rw-r--r--  1 root root 4096 Mar 13 06:16 fan1_min
-r--r--r--  1 root root 4096 Mar 13 06:16 fan2_alarm
-r--r--r--  1 root root 4096 Mar 13 06:16 fan2_beep
-r--r--r--  1 root root 4096 Mar 11 19:26 fan2_input
-rw-r--r--  1 root root 4096 Mar 13 06:16 fan2_min
-r--r--r--  1 root root 4096 Mar 13 06:16 fan3_alarm
-r--r--r--  1 root root 4096 Mar 13 06:16 fan3_beep
-r--r--r--  1 root root 4096 Mar 11 19:26 fan3_input
-rw-r--r--  1 root root 4096 Mar 13 06:16 fan3_min
-r--r--r--  1 root root 4096 Mar 13 06:16 fan4_alarm
-r--r--r--  1 root root 4096 Mar 13 06:16 fan4_beep
-r--r--r--  1 root root 4096 Mar 13 06:16 fan4_input
-rw-r--r--  1 root root 4096 Mar 13 06:16 fan4_min
-r--r--r--  1 root root 4096 Mar 13 06:16 fan5_alarm
-r--r--r--  1 root root 4096 Mar 13 06:16 fan5_beep
-r--r--r--  1 root root 4096 Mar 11 19:26 fan5_input
-rw-r--r--  1 root root 4096 Mar 13 06:16 fan5_min
drwxr-xr-x  3 root root0 Mar 11 19:25 hwmon
-r--r--r--  1 root root 4096 Mar 13 06:16 in0_alarm
-rw-r--r--  1 root root 4096 Mar 13 06:16 in0_beep
-r--r--r--  1 root root 4096 Mar 13 06:16 in0_input
-rw-r--r--  1 root root 4096 Mar 13 06:16 in0_max
-rw-r--r--  1 root root 4096 Mar 13 06:16 in0_min
-r--r--r--  1 root root 4096 Mar 13 06:16 in1_alarm
-r--r--r--  1 root root 4096 Mar 13 06:16 in1_beep
-r--r--r--  1 root root 4096 Mar 13 06:16 in1_input
-rw-r--r--  1 root root 4096 Mar 13 06:16 in1_max
-rw-r--r--  1 root root 4096 Mar 13 06:16 in1_min
-r--r--r--  1 root root 4096 Mar 13 06:16 in2_alarm
-r--r--r--  1 root root 4096 Mar 13 06:16 in2_beep
-r--r--r--  1 root root 4096 Mar 13 06:16 in2_input
-rw-r--r--  1 root root 4096 Mar 13 06:16 in2_max
-rw-r--r--  1 root root 4096 Mar 13 06:16 in2_min
-r--r--r--  1 root root 4096 Mar 13 06:16 in3_alarm
-r--r--r--  1 root root 4096 Mar 13 06:16 in3_beep
-r--r--r--  1 root root 4096 Mar 13 06:16 in3_input
-rw-r--r--  1 root root 4096 Mar 13 06:16 in3_max
-rw-r--r--  1 root root 4096 Mar 13 06:16 in3_min
-r--r--r--  

Re: [gentoo-user] Re: heat codes

2015-03-13 Thread Peter Humphrey
On Friday 13 March 2015 06:27:00 Dale wrote:
 Peter Humphrey wrote:
  On Thursday 12 March 2015 19:38:56 Dale wrote:
  I build everything into the kernel and I don't even install
  lm_sensors. I haven't installed that in ages.
  
  Does that mean that your gkrellm can't display temperatures?
 
 It's been displaying temps for many years.  I posted a list in my
 reply to Mick.  I also can get voltages but don't have it set to show
 them.  I do also monitor temps on the hard drives.  That's done
 through the smart thingy.

I don't know what led you to list that directory, but now that I look 
into my own setup I see I'm using kernel modules too. I know I used to 
use lm_sensors at one time, but genlop doesn't know about it so I must 
have omitted it when I last reinstalled.

# ls -l /sys/devices/platform
total 0
drwxr-xr-x 3 root root0 Mar 13 11:49 alarmtimer
drwxr-xr-x 4 root root0 Mar 13 11:49 coretemp.0
drwxr-xr-x 5 root root0 Mar 13 11:49 i8042
drwxr-xr-x 3 root root0 Mar 13 11:49 pcspkr
drwxr-xr-x 3 root root0 Mar 13 11:49 platform-framebuffer.0
drwxr-xr-x 3 root root0 Mar 13 11:49 PNP0C0C:00
drwxr-xr-x 2 root root0 Mar 13 11:49 power
-rw-r--r-- 1 root root 4.0K Mar 13 11:49 uevent
drwxr-xr-x 3 root root0 Mar 13 11:49 vboxdrv.0

-- 
Rgds
Peter.




Re: [gentoo-user] Re: heat codes

2015-03-13 Thread Dale
Peter Humphrey wrote:
 On Thursday 12 March 2015 19:38:56 Dale wrote:

 I build everything into the kernel and I don't even install
 lm_sensors. I haven't installed that in ages.
 Does that mean that your gkrellm can't display temperatures?


It's been displaying temps for many years.  I posted a list in my reply
to Mick.  I also can get voltages but don't have it set to show them.  I
do also monitor temps on the hard drives.  That's done through the smart
thingy. 

Dale

:-)  :-) 



Re: [gentoo-user] Re: heat codes

2015-03-13 Thread Dale
Peter Humphrey wrote:
 On Friday 13 March 2015 06:27:00 Dale wrote:
 Peter Humphrey wrote:
 On Thursday 12 March 2015 19:38:56 Dale wrote:
 I build everything into the kernel and I don't even install
 lm_sensors. I haven't installed that in ages.
 Does that mean that your gkrellm can't display temperatures?
 It's been displaying temps for many years.  I posted a list in my
 reply to Mick.  I also can get voltages but don't have it set to show
 them.  I do also monitor temps on the hard drives.  That's done
 through the smart thingy.
 I don't know what led you to list that directory, but now that I look 
 into my own setup I see I'm using kernel modules too. I know I used to 
 use lm_sensors at one time, but genlop doesn't know about it so I must 
 have omitted it when I last reinstalled.

 # ls -l /sys/devices/platform
 total 0
 drwxr-xr-x 3 root root0 Mar 13 11:49 alarmtimer
 drwxr-xr-x 4 root root0 Mar 13 11:49 coretemp.0
 drwxr-xr-x 5 root root0 Mar 13 11:49 i8042
 drwxr-xr-x 3 root root0 Mar 13 11:49 pcspkr
 drwxr-xr-x 3 root root0 Mar 13 11:49 platform-framebuffer.0
 drwxr-xr-x 3 root root0 Mar 13 11:49 PNP0C0C:00
 drwxr-xr-x 2 root root0 Mar 13 11:49 power
 -rw-r--r-- 1 root root 4.0K Mar 13 11:49 uevent
 drwxr-xr-x 3 root root0 Mar 13 11:49 vboxdrv.0



From my understanding, you can use either the kernel drivers or
lm-sensors.  Many years ago, I sort of got bored installing lm-sensors
and running the setup stuff all the time.  I seem to recall, you have to
do it again when you upgrade the kernel too.  Anyway, I started using
the kernel drivers and I've been doing it that way ever since.  Hey, it
works.  It also gets updated with each kernel upgrade too. 

I'm all for what works.  It works for me and seems it works for you as
well so, yeppie!!!   Given I been battling the flu for a few weeks,
yeppie is about as good as it gets right now.  I never could dance
anyway.  ;-)

Oh, I listed my sensor stuff because Mick listed his.  I thought we
could compare what we each get.  It looks the same to me.  I just didn't
see the need in posting it twice when odds are you will see both posts
anyway.  :-) 

Dale

:-)  :-) 




Re: [gentoo-user] Re: heat codes

2015-03-13 Thread Mick
On Friday 13 Mar 2015 15:49:38 Dale wrote:
 Peter Humphrey wrote:
  On Friday 13 March 2015 06:27:00 Dale wrote:
  Peter Humphrey wrote:
  On Thursday 12 March 2015 19:38:56 Dale wrote:
  I build everything into the kernel and I don't even install
  lm_sensors. I haven't installed that in ages.
  
  Does that mean that your gkrellm can't display temperatures?
  
  It's been displaying temps for many years.  I posted a list in my
  reply to Mick.  I also can get voltages but don't have it set to show
  them.  I do also monitor temps on the hard drives.  That's done
  through the smart thingy.
  
  I don't know what led you to list that directory, but now that I look
  into my own setup I see I'm using kernel modules too. I know I used to
  use lm_sensors at one time, but genlop doesn't know about it so I must
  have omitted it when I last reinstalled.
  
  # ls -l /sys/devices/platform
  total 0
  drwxr-xr-x 3 root root0 Mar 13 11:49 alarmtimer
  drwxr-xr-x 4 root root0 Mar 13 11:49 coretemp.0
  drwxr-xr-x 5 root root0 Mar 13 11:49 i8042
  drwxr-xr-x 3 root root0 Mar 13 11:49 pcspkr
  drwxr-xr-x 3 root root0 Mar 13 11:49 platform-framebuffer.0
  drwxr-xr-x 3 root root0 Mar 13 11:49 PNP0C0C:00
  drwxr-xr-x 2 root root0 Mar 13 11:49 power
  -rw-r--r-- 1 root root 4.0K Mar 13 11:49 uevent
  drwxr-xr-x 3 root root0 Mar 13 11:49 vboxdrv.0
 
 From my understanding, you can use either the kernel drivers or
 lm-sensors.  

Really?

I didn't know this.  I have installed both, seemingly without any ill effects.


 Many years ago, I sort of got bored installing lm-sensors
 and running the setup stuff all the time.  I seem to recall, you have to
 do it again when you upgrade the kernel too.  

I didn't know this either.  Anyway, gkrellm works happily which is what I 
primarily use, unless I'm login in remotely in which case I just run 'watch -d 
sensors' if I want to check what's happening on the MoBo.

-- 
Regards,
Mick


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Re: [gentoo-user] Re: heat codes

2015-03-12 Thread Tuomo Hartikainen
On 150312 1835, Dale wrote:
 waben...@gmail.com wrote:
  Something similar happened to me. I accidentally pressed F6 while
  focused gkrellm but didn't noticed it. Some time later I realized that
  the fontsize of gkrellm was increased so that it's height doesn't fit
  to the screen anymore. Fist I thought that it has something to do with
  the latest update. It took some time till I recognized that I simply
  had to press F7 to restore the fontsize to its former height. :-)
 
  --
  Regards
  wabe
 
 Well, you should have seen the look on my face the other day when
 Firefox went FULL SCREEN.  I mean full screen like it does when I hit F
 and am watching a video.  Heck, I didn't have a menu at the top,  To
 this day, I have no clue what I did.  I was typing a comment on a social
 site and all of the sudden, it went sucky.  Still no clue but thank
 goodness it fixed itself after I killed it and restarted. 
 
 Dale

Try pressing F11 in Firefox? ;)
-- 
Tuomo Hartikainen



Re: [gentoo-user] Re: heat codes

2015-03-12 Thread Dale
Peter Humphrey wrote:
 On Friday 27 February 2015 21:41:33 waben...@gmail.com wrote:

 You can switch the numerics on and off by left mouse click into the
 respective monitor.
 Well, I'll be damned! I never found that out for myself, not in all 
 those years of using it.

 So no bug here then. Sorry Dale :)


This is funny.  I accidentally clicked the thing and later on,
accidentally clicked it again to turn it back on.   Now, first time,
makes me go hmm.  Second time, hair puller.  It took me a while to
figure out what I was accidentally doing to fix it.  For a bit, I was
scared to put my mouse anywhere near the thing.  I wasn't sure what else
I might accidentally mess up. 

Well, now you know.  ;-)

Dale

:-)  :-) 



Re: [gentoo-user] Re: heat codes

2015-03-12 Thread Dale
James wrote:
 Mick michaelkintzios at gmail.com writes:


 # sensors
 radeon-pci-0100
 Adapter: PCI adapter
 temp1:+36.0°C  (crit = +120.0°C, hyst = +90.0°C) 
 fam15h_power-pci-00c4
 Adapter: PCI adapter
 power1:   19.97 W  (crit = 125.19 W)
  
 k10temp-pci-00c3
 Adapter: PCI adapter
 temp1:+24.9°C  (high = +70.0°C)
(crit = +90.0°C, hyst = +87.0°C)
 There should be more after these, showing your voltages and various MoBo 
 sensors.  Can you check that it87 is actually loaded?  lsmod will tell you.

 Oh, I just noticed this posting; Dale's latest posting caused me to 
 look at the thread again.

 rc-status shows lm_sensors running, as does ps.

 but  lsmod  is empty:
 Module  Size  Used by

 /etc/conf.d/lm_sensors shows:

 MODULE_0=fam15h_power
 MODULE_1=it87
 MODULE_2=k10temp


 I think I have it 'compiled in'. Are you sure I should be
 seeing more information?

 GA-990FXA-UD3 is the mobo.


 James

I have a 970A-UD3P mobo and I use this under Hardware Monitoring support:

AMD Family 10h+ temperature sensor
AMD Family 15h processor power
ITE IT87xx and compatibles

Under bus support:

Intel PIIX4 and compatible (ATI/AMD/Serverworks/Broadcom/SMSC)

Our mobo isn't exactly the same but if they use the same chips, those
should get you all the info you need. 

I might add, I build everything into the kernel and I don't even install
lm_sensors. I haven't installed that in ages. 

Hope that helps.

Dale

:-)  :-) 




Re: [gentoo-user] Re: heat codes

2015-03-12 Thread Peter Humphrey
On Thursday 12 March 2015 14:40:09 Dale wrote:
 Peter Humphrey wrote:
  On Friday 27 February 2015 21:41:33 waben...@gmail.com wrote:
  You can switch the numerics on and off by left mouse click into the
  respective monitor.
  
  Well, I'll be damned! I never found that out for myself, not in all
  those years of using it.
  
  So no bug here then. Sorry Dale :)
 
 This is funny.  I accidentally clicked the thing and later on,
 accidentally clicked it again to turn it back on.   Now, first time,
 makes me go hmm.  Second time, hair puller.  It took me a while to
 figure out what I was accidentally doing to fix it.  For a bit, I was
 scared to put my mouse anywhere near the thing.  I wasn't sure what
 else I might accidentally mess up.
 
 Well, now you know.  ;-)

Well, it's just as I always say: you learn something new every day - if 
you're not careful! :-)

-- 
Rgds
Peter.




Re: [gentoo-user] Re: heat codes

2015-03-12 Thread wabenbau
Am Donnerstag, 12.03.2015 um 14:40
schrieb Dale rdalek1...@gmail.com:

 Peter Humphrey wrote:
  On Friday 27 February 2015 21:41:33 waben...@gmail.com wrote:
 
  You can switch the numerics on and off by left mouse click into the
  respective monitor.
  Well, I'll be damned! I never found that out for myself, not in all 
  those years of using it.
 
  So no bug here then. Sorry Dale :)
 
 
 This is funny.  I accidentally clicked the thing and later on,
 accidentally clicked it again to turn it back on.   Now, first time,
 makes me go hmm.  Second time, hair puller.  It took me a while to
 figure out what I was accidentally doing to fix it.  For a bit, I was
 scared to put my mouse anywhere near the thing.  I wasn't sure what
 else I might accidentally mess up. 
 
 Well, now you know.  ;-)

Something similar happened to me. I accidentally pressed F6 while
focused gkrellm but didn't noticed it. Some time later I realized that
the fontsize of gkrellm was increased so that it's height doesn't fit
to the screen anymore. Fist I thought that it has something to do with
the latest update. It took some time till I recognized that I simply
had to press F7 to restore the fontsize to its former height. :-)

--
Regards
wabe



Re: [gentoo-user] Re: heat codes

2015-03-12 Thread Dale
waben...@gmail.com wrote:
 Am Donnerstag, 12.03.2015 um 14:40
 schrieb Dale rdalek1...@gmail.com:

 Peter Humphrey wrote:
 On Friday 27 February 2015 21:41:33 waben...@gmail.com wrote:

 You can switch the numerics on and off by left mouse click into the
 respective monitor.
 Well, I'll be damned! I never found that out for myself, not in all 
 those years of using it.

 So no bug here then. Sorry Dale :)

 This is funny.  I accidentally clicked the thing and later on,
 accidentally clicked it again to turn it back on.   Now, first time,
 makes me go hmm.  Second time, hair puller.  It took me a while to
 figure out what I was accidentally doing to fix it.  For a bit, I was
 scared to put my mouse anywhere near the thing.  I wasn't sure what
 else I might accidentally mess up. 

 Well, now you know.  ;-)
 Something similar happened to me. I accidentally pressed F6 while
 focused gkrellm but didn't noticed it. Some time later I realized that
 the fontsize of gkrellm was increased so that it's height doesn't fit
 to the screen anymore. Fist I thought that it has something to do with
 the latest update. It took some time till I recognized that I simply
 had to press F7 to restore the fontsize to its former height. :-)

 --
 Regards
 wabe



Well, you should have seen the look on my face the other day when
Firefox went FULL SCREEN.  I mean full screen like it does when I hit F
and am watching a video.  Heck, I didn't have a menu at the top,  To
this day, I have no clue what I did.  I was typing a comment on a social
site and all of the sudden, it went sucky.  Still no clue but thank
goodness it fixed itself after I killed it and restarted. 

Dale

:-)  :-)



Re: [gentoo-user] Re: heat codes

2015-03-12 Thread Neil Bothwick
On Thu, 12 Mar 2015 22:38:33 +, Peter Humphrey wrote:

 Well, it's just as I always say: you learn something new every day - if 
 you're not careful! :-)

As the old saying goes: experience is what you get when you didn't get
what you wanted :)


-- 
Neil Bothwick

I'm Pink, Therefore I'm Spam


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[gentoo-user] Re: heat codes

2015-03-12 Thread James
Mick michaelkintzios at gmail.com writes:


  # sensors
  radeon-pci-0100
  Adapter: PCI adapter
  temp1:+36.0°C  (crit = +120.0°C, hyst = +90.0°C) 
  fam15h_power-pci-00c4
  Adapter: PCI adapter
  power1:   19.97 W  (crit = 125.19 W)
 
  k10temp-pci-00c3
  Adapter: PCI adapter
  temp1:+24.9°C  (high = +70.0°C)
 (crit = +90.0°C, hyst = +87.0°C)

 There should be more after these, showing your voltages and various MoBo 
 sensors.  Can you check that it87 is actually loaded?  lsmod will tell you.


Oh, I just noticed this posting; Dale's latest posting caused me to 
look at the thread again.

rc-status shows lm_sensors running, as does ps.

but  lsmod  is empty:
Module  Size  Used by

/etc/conf.d/lm_sensors shows:

MODULE_0=fam15h_power
MODULE_1=it87
MODULE_2=k10temp


I think I have it 'compiled in'. Are you sure I should be
seeing more information?

GA-990FXA-UD3 is the mobo.


James

Re: [gentoo-user] Re: heat codes

2015-02-28 Thread Peter Humphrey
On Friday 27 February 2015 21:41:33 waben...@gmail.com wrote:

 You can switch the numerics on and off by left mouse click into the
 respective monitor.

Well, I'll be damned! I never found that out for myself, not in all 
those years of using it.

So no bug here then. Sorry Dale :)

-- 
Rgds
Peter.




Re: [gentoo-user] Re: heat codes

2015-02-28 Thread Mick
On Thursday 26 Feb 2015 20:13:07 James wrote:
 I'm not sure how to moinor the CPU (8 cores) temperature
 and if it is a calculated (estimated value) or a real temp?
 
 # sensors
 radeon-pci-0100
 Adapter: PCI adapter
 temp1:+36.0°C  (crit = +120.0°C, hyst = +90.0°C)
 
 fam15h_power-pci-00c4
 Adapter: PCI adapter
 power1:   19.97 W  (crit = 125.19 W)
 
 k10temp-pci-00c3
 Adapter: PCI adapter
 temp1:+24.9°C  (high = +70.0°C)
(crit = +90.0°C, hyst = +87.0°C)

There should be more after these, showing your voltages and various MoBo 
sensors.  Can you check that it87 is actually loaded?  lsmod will tell you.

-- 
Regards,
Mick


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Re: [gentoo-user] Re: heat codes

2015-02-27 Thread wabenbau
Am Freitag, 27.02.2015 um 09:43
schrieb Peter Humphrey pe...@prh.myzen.co.uk:

 On Friday 27 February 2015 09:02:18 Neil Bothwick wrote:
  On Fri, 27 Feb 2015 02:27:03 -0600, Dale wrote:
Yes, I have two instances of it running permanently too. Though
I think James is right too, in that it does still have the odd
bug.
   
   I haven't had any trouble with mine.  It just sits there and runs
   until I logout.  What is this bug it suffers from?
  
  Yay! We've finally found some software that works perfectly for Dale
  yet shows bugs for other people!
  
  You're slipping, Dale!
 
 :)
 
 Just a minor thing, Dale. Each curve plotted - of, say, traffic over 
 eth0 - is supposed to show a numerical value in the upper left
 corner, but from time to time one of those will stop being shown. It
 then stays that way until I remove my .gkrellm2 directory and set the
 program up again.

You can switch the numerics on and off by left mouse click into the
respective monitor.

Regards
wabe



Re: [gentoo-user] Re: heat codes

2015-02-27 Thread Dale
Peter Humphrey wrote:
 On Thursday 26 February 2015 19:48:06 Dale wrote:

 While it has been a while since I used gkrellm to monitor a remote
 system, I use it every day to monitor my system I sit at.  Keep in
 mind, not much changes on how gkrellm works.  It looks for
 temp/fan/CPU/memory etc info and displays it.  I'm not sure it
 requires a whole lot of updating to do that especially given it has
 worked fine here for ages and not much has really changed.
 Yes, I have two instances of it running permanently too. Though I think 
 James is right too, in that it does still have the odd bug.



I haven't had any trouble with mine.  It just sits there and runs until
I logout.  What is this bug it suffers from? 

Dale

:-)  :-) 



Re: [gentoo-user] Re: heat codes

2015-02-27 Thread Neil Bothwick
On Fri, 27 Feb 2015 02:27:03 -0600, Dale wrote:

  Yes, I have two instances of it running permanently too. Though I
  think James is right too, in that it does still have the odd bug.

 I haven't had any trouble with mine.  It just sits there and runs until
 I logout.  What is this bug it suffers from? 

Yay! We've finally found some software that works perfectly for Dale yet
shows bugs for other people!

You're slipping, Dale!


-- 
Neil Bothwick

In the begining, there was nothing.
And God said Let there be light and there was light.
There was still nothing, but you could see it better.


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Re: [gentoo-user] Re: heat codes

2015-02-27 Thread Peter Humphrey
On Friday 27 February 2015 09:02:18 Neil Bothwick wrote:
 On Fri, 27 Feb 2015 02:27:03 -0600, Dale wrote:
   Yes, I have two instances of it running permanently too. Though I
   think James is right too, in that it does still have the odd bug.
  
  I haven't had any trouble with mine.  It just sits there and runs
  until I logout.  What is this bug it suffers from?
 
 Yay! We've finally found some software that works perfectly for Dale
 yet shows bugs for other people!
 
 You're slipping, Dale!

:)

Just a minor thing, Dale. Each curve plotted - of, say, traffic over 
eth0 - is supposed to show a numerical value in the upper left corner, 
but from time to time one of those will stop being shown. It then stays 
that way until I remove my .gkrellm2 directory and set the program up 
again.

Oh, and the Invisible theme stopped being invisible when KDE-4.0 was 
first allowed to escape. I reported it at the time, but nothing's 
happened as far as I can see.

Nothing major, as I said. I can live with it.

-- 
Rgds
Peter.




Re: [gentoo-user] Re: heat codes

2015-02-27 Thread Dale
Neil Bothwick wrote:
 On Fri, 27 Feb 2015 02:27:03 -0600, Dale wrote:

 Yes, I have two instances of it running permanently too. Though I
 think James is right too, in that it does still have the odd bug.
 I haven't had any trouble with mine.  It just sits there and runs until
 I logout.  What is this bug it suffers from? 
 Yay! We've finally found some software that works perfectly for Dale yet
 shows bugs for other people!

 You're slipping, Dale!



I was wanting to test it to see if it would screw up with me too.  ROFL 
I figure I must have left something out somewhere.  ;-)

Dale

:-)  :-) 



Re: [gentoo-user] Re: heat codes

2015-02-26 Thread Peter Humphrey
On Thursday 26 February 2015 19:48:06 Dale wrote:

 While it has been a while since I used gkrellm to monitor a remote
 system, I use it every day to monitor my system I sit at.  Keep in
 mind, not much changes on how gkrellm works.  It looks for
 temp/fan/CPU/memory etc info and displays it.  I'm not sure it
 requires a whole lot of updating to do that especially given it has
 worked fine here for ages and not much has really changed.

Yes, I have two instances of it running permanently too. Though I think 
James is right too, in that it does still have the odd bug.

 It was the remote part that I wasn't sure about.  I know it used to
 have that feature and if it still does, the remote part works just
 like the local part does.  You just tell it to monitor something
 other than the system you are sitting at.

$ gkrellm -s host

Then set it up the same way as you would the local one. KDE even knows 
to restart it along with other progs, which is more than can be said for 
Chromium.

-- 
Rgds
Peter.




Re: [gentoo-user] Re: heat codes

2015-02-26 Thread Volker Armin Hemmann
Am 27.02.2015 um 02:23 schrieb James:
 Volker Armin Hemmann volkerarmin at googlemail.com writes:


 em, but you are already monitoring it!
 Maybe. It hard to tell if there are more than one
 temperature sensor, what buss interfacet they are on
 and if it is a calculated or esitmated or actual temperature
 sensor.

it pretty much tells you all that with its name. And for radeon - there
is only one.


 Does anyone with similar hardware have a more extensive list?
 no, that is all you got.
 That's pretty sad. All that hardware and 3 temps


 What I'd really like is a very fast (real time?) gui to watch
 you won't get that, because the senors don't update in 'realtime'.
 Sure. But if I knew of a relatively consistent delay semantic,
use the command below and watch for changes. Some boards update every
second, some every three seconds.

 I could align the delays in temperature sensing with what's going
 on with code compiling or execution; even if it is a rough estimate.


 watch -n1 sensors.
  
 not bad. for quick checks.

 Works even without systemd. Shocking, I know.
 As usual, your insight and singular wit makes for pleasurable reading.

 thx,
 James








[gentoo-user] Re: heat codes

2015-02-26 Thread James
James wireless at tampabay.rr.com writes:


 modprobe: FATAL: Module i2c-piix4 not found.
 Failed to load module i2c-piix4.

OK, so I found this code and added it to the kernel.


 Next adapter: Radeon i2c bit bus 0x90 (i2c-0)
 Do you want to scan it? (yes/NO/selectively): yes
 {through (i2c-7) all failed.

No luck on finding/configuring the radeon temperature
sensors.

 
 So lm_sensors only found these modules:
 
MODULE_0=fam15h_power   [ OK ]
MODULE_1=it87   [ OK ]
MODULE_2=k10temp[ OK ]


 Does anyone with similar hardware have a more extensive list?

I'm not sure how to moinor the CPU (8 cores) temperature
and if it is a calculated (estimated value) or a real temp?

# sensors
radeon-pci-0100
Adapter: PCI adapter
temp1:+36.0°C  (crit = +120.0°C, hyst = +90.0°C)

fam15h_power-pci-00c4
Adapter: PCI adapter
power1:   19.97 W  (crit = 125.19 W)

k10temp-pci-00c3
Adapter: PCI adapter
temp1:+24.9°C  (high = +70.0°C)
   (crit = +90.0°C, hyst = +87.0°C)

 What I'd really like is a very fast (real time?) gui to watch
 these temperatures as certain portions of codes are compile or executed.

Right now I'm running lxde, but my migration to lxqt (QT5) should
begin very soon so any QT5_ish gui would be very cool too.

 https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/fan_speed_control

James


Re: [gentoo-user] Re: heat codes

2015-02-26 Thread Volker Armin Hemmann
Am 26.02.2015 um 21:13 schrieb James:
 James wireless at tampabay.rr.com writes:


 modprobe: FATAL: Module i2c-piix4 not found.
 Failed to load module i2c-piix4.
 OK, so I found this code and added it to the kernel.


 Next adapter: Radeon i2c bit bus 0x90 (i2c-0)
 Do you want to scan it? (yes/NO/selectively): yes
 {through (i2c-7) all failed.
 No luck on finding/configuring the radeon temperature
 sensors.

em, but you are already monitoring it!


 So lm_sensors only found these modules:

 MODULE_0=fam15h_power   [ OK ]
 MODULE_1=it87   [ OK ]
 MODULE_2=k10temp[ OK ]
which looks good.


 Does anyone with similar hardware have a more extensive list?

no, that is all you got.

 I'm not sure how to moinor the CPU (8 cores) temperature
 and if it is a calculated (estimated value) or a real temp?

 # sensors
 radeon-pci-0100
 Adapter: PCI adapter
 temp1:+36.0°C  (crit = +120.0°C, hyst = +90.0°C)

see? radeon. Monitored. Just move along.


 fam15h_power-pci-00c4
 Adapter: PCI adapter
 power1:   19.97 W  (crit = 125.19 W)

 k10temp-pci-00c3
 Adapter: PCI adapter
 temp1:+24.9°C  (high = +70.0°C)
(crit = +90.0°C, hyst = +87.0°C)

 What I'd really like is a very fast (real time?) gui to watch
 these temperatures as certain portions of codes are compile or executed.

you won't get that, because the senors don't update in 'realtime'.

 Right now I'm running lxde, but my migration to lxqt (QT5) should
 begin very soon so any QT5_ish gui would be very cool too.


watch -n1 sensors.

Works even without systemd. Shocking, I know.




[gentoo-user] Re: heat codes

2015-02-26 Thread James
Volker Armin Hemmann volkerarmin at googlemail.com writes:


 em, but you are already monitoring it!

Maybe. It hard to tell if there are more than one
temperature sensor, what buss interfacet they are on
and if it is a calculated or esitmated or actual temperature
sensor.


  Does anyone with similar hardware have a more extensive list?
 no, that is all you got.

That's pretty sad. All that hardware and 3 temps


  What I'd really like is a very fast (real time?) gui to watch

 you won't get that, because the senors don't update in 'realtime'.

Sure. But if I knew of a relatively consistent delay semantic,
I could align the delays in temperature sensing with what's going
on with code compiling or execution; even if it is a rough estimate.


 watch -n1 sensors.
 
not bad. for quick checks.

 Works even without systemd. Shocking, I know.

As usual, your insight and singular wit makes for pleasurable reading.

thx,
James





[gentoo-user] Re: heat codes

2015-02-26 Thread James
Dale rdalek1967 at gmail.com writes:


  I need to monitor this hardware for temperatures, including logging
  of temperatures, on as wide array of temperature sensors that is
  possible with kernel 3.18.6-gentoo.)

 I'm not sure if this is still available or not but doesn't gkrellm do
 this sort of thing?  I used it to monitor another rig several years
 ago.  May be worth looking into.

 Dale


That (gkrellm) codebase looks old, un-maintained and  wee bit clumsy. It's
interesting to examine for ideas. I think I'm going with something a bit more
embedded inspired, for speed and portability reasons. I also have since
found this interesting piece of code;

sys-cluster/ganglia

First glance, it's a bit heavy-handed for my needs. I've gotta keep
looking before I decide on a path forward for RT temperature monitoring,
dB tracking and problem profiling. 

Thanks!
James





Re: [gentoo-user] Re: heat codes

2015-02-26 Thread Dale
James wrote:
 Dale rdalek1967 at gmail.com writes:


 I need to monitor this hardware for temperatures, including logging
 of temperatures, on as wide array of temperature sensors that is
 possible with kernel 3.18.6-gentoo.)
 I'm not sure if this is still available or not but doesn't gkrellm do
 this sort of thing?  I used it to monitor another rig several years
 ago.  May be worth looking into.
 Dale

 That (gkrellm) codebase looks old, un-maintained and  wee bit clumsy. It's
 interesting to examine for ideas. I think I'm going with something a bit more
 embedded inspired, for speed and portability reasons. I also have since
 found this interesting piece of code;

 sys-cluster/ganglia

 First glance, it's a bit heavy-handed for my needs. I've gotta keep
 looking before I decide on a path forward for RT temperature monitoring,
 dB tracking and problem profiling. 

 Thanks!
 James



While it has been a while since I used gkrellm to monitor a remote
system, I use it every day to monitor my system I sit at.  Keep in mind,
not much changes on how gkrellm works.  It looks for temp/fan/CPU/memory
etc info and displays it.  I'm not sure it requires a whole lot of
updating to do that especially given it has worked fine here for ages
and not much has really changed. 

It was the remote part that I wasn't sure about.  I know it used to have
that feature and if it still does, the remote part works just like the
local part does.  You just tell it to monitor something other than the
system you are sitting at. 

Sorry I wasn't more clear in my first message. 

Dale

:-)  :-)