Hi,
On Thu, 17 Nov 2022 at 15:14, Peter peter.northerly@gmail.com wrote:
After finally figuring out how to upgrade just the kernel so as to be able to make pm-suspend work properly, there is one remaining issue I can't seem to figure out, and that is the temperature sensors.
Lm-sensors is one of those weird mysterious things that sometimes seems to be really silly in the output it provides.
I have lm-sensors installed and this is what it shows:
k10temp-pci-00c3 Adapter: PCI adapter Tctl: +31.5°C
sensor = thermistor CPUTIN: +30.5°C (high = +80.0°C,
I'd probably base the "likely temperature" of your CPU based on these two readings above, plus your fan is slowly turning (thus not rushing to cool down a hot CPU).
I don't get it. First, its impossible there can be 100C+ temps. The case fan is silent, the psu fan is not moving, the system works fine and feels cool in fact cold to the touch.
Here's mine on an AMD CPU:
iwlwifi_1-virtual-0 Adapter: Virtual device temp1: +38.0°C
nvme-pci-0100 Adapter: PCI adapter Composite: +43.9°C (low = -273.1°C, high = +84.8°C) (crit = +84.8°C) Sensor 1: +43.9°C (low = -273.1°C, high = +65261.8°C) Sensor 2: +46.9°C (low = -273.1°C, high = +65261.8°C)
k10temp-pci-00c3 Adapter: PCI adapter Tctl: +45.6°C Tdie: +35.6°C
Now, for some reason I dont have the ISA sensor output (used to have that in the past on the same machine), isn't it silly that it thinks my NVME storage card can handle 65k degrees C.
Any suggestions? Or should I just stop worrying?
I think as long as the fans spin (and they are reporting slow spin, suggesting they arent hot) and things dont feel hot, it seems fine I guess. Is there some alternative software we can use instead of lm-sensors?
Thanks, Srdjan