Date: Tue, 22 Jul 2008 14:56:25 +0300 From: Manolis Kiagias <sonic2000gr@gmail.com> To: Achilleas Mantzios <achill@matrix.gatewaynet.com> Cc: Tore Lund <tl32@next.online.no>, freebsd-questions@freebsd.org Subject: Re: Monitoring CPU temperature: mbmon shows 201 degrees C Message-ID: <4885CAE9.5080301@gmail.com> In-Reply-To: <200807221443.16879.achill@matrix.gatewaynet.com> References: <48849FFD.10285.C71CED5@iwrtech.iwr.ru.ac.za> <200807221404.29646.achill@matrix.gatewaynet.com> <4885C420.9080307@gmail.com> <200807221443.16879.achill@matrix.gatewaynet.com>
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Achilleas Mantzios wrote: > Στις Tuesday 22 July 2008 14:27:28 ο/η Manolis Kiagias έγραψε: > >> Achilleas Mantzios wrote: >> >>>> >>>> >>>>> While experimenting, i noticed the 1st and 3rd temperatures from mbmon to be updated in a fashion that seems >>>>> natural. >>>>> [achix@panix ~]% mbmon >>>>> Temp.= 41.0, 201.0, 42.0; Rot.= 3443, 0, 0 >>>>> Vcore = 1.50, 1.81; Volt. = 3.30, 5.08, 11.43, -11.74, -1.69 >>>>> >>>>> >>>>> >>>> What chipset is the mobo based on? mbmon runs fine on my 865G and a 3Ghz >>>> P4 CPU. You are probably correct, the middle temp may represent a sensor >>>> that is not recognized, but the other readings seem normal. >>>> >>>> >>>> >>> i'll let you know next time i open the case. Is there any reading from dmesg or sysctl that can reveal >>> that info? >>> >>> >>> >> Sure. There are various places to get this info. Sometimes the BIOS >> startup messages contain a hint on the chipset (like 865, 915 and so on). >> My dmesg also shows: >> >> agp0: <Intel 82865 host to AGP bridge> on hostb0 >> >> And you can also use pciconf -v -l >> >> hdr=0x00 >> vendor = 'Intel Corporation' >> device = '82865G/PE/P, 82848P DRAM Controller / Host-Hub Interface' >> class = bridge >> subclass = HOST-PCI >> >> Considering that you are running an older P4, probably socket 478, >> chances are you are using an 845 or 848 or 865 chipset. >> >> > > Then by all evidence, > % dmesg | grep -i agp > agp0: <SiS 651 host to AGP bridge> on hostb0 > > hostb0@pci0:0:0:0: class=0x060000 card=0x1801147b chip=0x06511039 rev=0x02 hdr=0x00 > vendor = 'Silicon Integrated Systems (SiS)' > device = 'SiS651 Host-to-PCI Bridge' > class = bridge > subclass = HOST-PCI > > it must be the SiS 651 chipset > http://www.sis.com/products/sis651.htm > > Right. SIS chipsets are not exactly my favorites, but they seem to be working with FreeBSD, so I won't complain. I got one at school loaded with 7.0 and have no problems. Arguably it is not as stressed as yours.
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