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Date:      Thu, 7 Aug 2008 22:37:52 +0200
From:      Pieter de Goeje <pieter@degoeje.nl>
To:        freebsd-questions@freebsd.org
Cc:        "Ronald F. Guilmette" <rfg@tristatelogic.com>
Subject:   Re: Questions about healthd and mprime
Message-ID:  <200808072237.52918.pieter@degoeje.nl>
In-Reply-To: <32214.1218139739@tristatelogic.com>
References:  <32214.1218139739@tristatelogic.com>

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On Thursday 07 August 2008, Ronald F. Guilmette wrote:
> Problem is: documentation of healthd's output is almost non-existant.
> OK, so when it prints those three temperature numbers, which one stands
> for what?  And if, as I surmize, the last (and highest) one is CPU
> temp, then why doesn't it seem to change at all?  I'm guessing that
> I just need to create some artificial load, yes?

Try sysutils/k8temp. When run with -n, it only prints the CPU's temperature. 
Together with rrdtool it makes a nice graph:
http://lux.student.utwente.nl/~pyotr/stats/graphs/temperature-all-168.png

For Intel Core CPU's there's coretemp(4).

>
> OK, so _now_ I've looked around and found out that a lot of folks
> these days heat up their CPUs by running the "mprime" thingy.  Swell.
> But I don't know diddly poo about this program.  So can somebody please
> tell me the set of "best" command line options for the thing if your
> only goal is to stress your CPU?

I don't know about mprime, but running "make -j4 buildworld" in /usr/src will 
make your CPU sweat.

>
> Thanks in advance.
>
>
> Regards,
> rfg

-- 
Pieter de Goeje




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