You can always look at the most recent still complete snapshot in the Wayback Machine (archive.org): http://web.archive.org/web/20150905145034/http://www.lm-sensors.org/
On Jan 13, 2016, at 07:48, Andrey Chervonets <A.Chervonets at cominder.eu> wrote:
Some time ago I had found the lm_sensors project. There were some instructions for many hardware. Sorry to say, but right now the web-site http://lm-sensors.org/ <http://lm-sensors.org/> have no more content about this.
However the lm-sensors was included in many Linux distributions (at least on CentOS, RHEL 6.x and similar), so it was possible to:
install
yum install lm_sensors
run to detect devices
sensors-detect
and if OK (it has drivers for your hardware) then can get the output:
sensors
acpitz-virtual-0 Adapter: Virtual device temp1: +8.3 C (crit = +31.3 C)
coretemp-isa-0000 Adapter: ISA adapter Physical id 0: +57.0 C (high = +78.0 C, crit = +88.0 C) Core 0: +54.0 C (high = +78.0 C, crit = +88.0 C) Core 1: +52.0 C (high = +78.0 C, crit = +88.0 C) Core 2: +51.0 C (high = +78.0 C, crit = +88.0 C) Core 3: +54.0 C (high = +78.0 C, crit = +88.0 C)
power_meter-acpi-0 Adapter: ACPI interface power1: 0.00 nW (interval = 300.00 s)
coretemp-isa-0004 Adapter: ISA adapter Physical id 1: +50.0 C (high = +78.0 C, crit = +88.0 C) Core 0: +50.0 C (high = +78.0 C, crit = +88.0 C) Core 1: +49.0 C (high = +78.0 C, crit = +88.0 C) Core 2: +45.0 C (high = +78.0 C, crit = +88.0 C) Core 3: +49.0 C (high = +78.0 C, crit = +88.0 C)
Detailed information is available at: https://www.kernel.org/doc/Documentation/thermal/ <https://www.kernel.org/doc/Documentation/thermal/>
Please, drop me a mail if You will find anything useful. I am interested too.
Best regards,
Andrey Chervonets
CoMinder Support http://www.cominder.eu/ <http://www.cominder.eu/> mobile: +371 26517848
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