On 08/04/13 17:22, Gary Aitken wrote:
> Ok, so now I see that my cpu temperature shoots up pretty dang fast when a
> build is going on.
>
> I'm running an AMD Phenom II X4 with the AMD-supplied fan in an
> ASUS M4A89TD PRO / USB3 motherboard.
>
> The system "works fine" unless I start a cpu-inte
On Mon, 5 Aug 2013 10:33:55 +0400
Eugene wrote:
> Hello Gary,
>
> Also make sure there is no packed dirt on the heatsink -- I don't
> know about AMDs, but older Intel heatsinks often tend to accumulate a
> paper-like layer of dirt on the 'top' of heatsink grid, blocking the
> airflow. I once had
Gary Aitken wrote:
> Air ducting shouldn't be a problem; I've got the side of the case off...
This just might be part of the problem. Air plumbing
is not as forgiving as it was in the old days.
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On 05/08/2013 06:05, Gary Aitken wrote:
On 08/04/13 21:39, Frank Leonhardt wrote:
This suggests it's not the ACPI in FreeBSD shutting you down, but
something on the motherboard.
That was my guess as well.
As it's probably not FreeBSD you're now asking on the wrong list, and
other than cooling
MD Phenom II X4 temperature issues (was Re: hardware monitor)
You can also try shutting down (obviously), then removing the heat sink, put
some thermal paste on the processor and reinstall the heat sink. Sometimes
there isn't much (any) thermal paste there and the processor can't get the
You can also try shutting down (obviously), then removing the heat sink, put
some thermal paste on the processor and reinstall the heat sink. Sometimes
there isn't much (any) thermal paste there and the processor can't get the heat
into the heat sink.
On 2013, Aug 4, at 15:22, Gary Aitken wro
On 08/04/13 21:39, Frank Leonhardt wrote:
> On 05/08/2013 03:01, Gary Aitken wrote:
>>> 50C isn't crazy.
>> Actually, the 50C figure is just where it shoots to for starters.
>> Mfg specs say 62C max, so I stall the process when it gets around
>> 59 and still climbing steeply.
>
> The manufactures
On 05/08/2013 03:01, Gary Aitken wrote:
> 50C isn't crazy.
Actually, the 50C figure is just where it shoots to for starters.
Mfg specs say 62C max, so I stall the process when it gets around 59
and still climbing steeply.
The manufactures specs I found when I looked that range of CPUs up was 71
On 08/04/13 18:30, Frank Leonhardt wrote:
> On 05/08/2013 00:29, Gary Aitken wrote:
>> On 08/04/13 17:22, Gary Aitken wrote:
>>> Ok, so now I see that my cpu temperature shoots up pretty dang
>>> fast when a build is going on.
>>>
>>> I'm running an AMD Phenom II X4 with the AMD-supplied fan in an
On 05/08/2013 00:29, Gary Aitken wrote:
On 08/04/13 17:22, Gary Aitken wrote:
Ok, so now I see that my cpu temperature shoots up pretty dang fast when a
build is going on.
I'm running an AMD Phenom II X4 with the AMD-supplied fan in an
ASUS M4A89TD PRO / USB3 motherboard.
The system "works fin
On 8/4/2013 6:29 PM, Gary Aitken wrote:
On 08/04/13 17:22, Gary Aitken wrote:
Ok, so now I see that my cpu temperature shoots up pretty dang fast when a
build is going on.
I'm running an AMD Phenom II X4 with the AMD-supplied fan in an
ASUS M4A89TD PRO / USB3 motherboard.
The system "works fin
On 08/04/13 17:22, Gary Aitken wrote:
> Ok, so now I see that my cpu temperature shoots up pretty dang fast when a
> build is going on.
>
> I'm running an AMD Phenom II X4 with the AMD-supplied fan in an
> ASUS M4A89TD PRO / USB3 motherboard.
>
> The system "works fine" unless I start a cpu-inte
14:48:56 -0600, Gary Aitken wrote:
>> Can anyone suggest a hardware monitor app in the ports tree?
>> I've got an amd64 which may have a temperature issue,
>> but I can't see it to tell...
>
> If it's primarily about temperature... amdtemp (kernel
&g
On 04/08/2013 21:48, Gary Aitken wrote:
Can anyone suggest a hardware monitor app in the ports tree?
I've got an amd64 which may have a temperature issue,
but I can't see it to tell...
Try "sysctl hw.acpi.thermal"
For more information see "man acpi" and man &q
On Sun, 04 Aug 2013 14:48:56 -0600, Gary Aitken wrote:
> Can anyone suggest a hardware monitor app in the ports tree?
> I've got an amd64 which may have a temperature issue,
> but I can't see it to tell...
If it's primarily about temperature... amdtemp (kernel
module),
Can anyone suggest a hardware monitor app in the ports tree?
I've got an amd64 which may have a temperature issue,
but I can't see it to tell...
Thanks,
Gary
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> -Original Message-
> From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Behalf Of Jim Capozzoli
> Sent: Saturday, June 23, 2007 11:22 AM
> To: freebsd-questions@freebsd.org
> Subject: Re: Hardware monitor needed
>
>
> On 6/21/07, Eduardo Viruena Silv
; check this from software? I would like to install a hardware monitor program
> that can log out processor temperature in every minute. The mainboard is ASUS
> P5LD2, if that matters. Is there a software out there that can do this for
> me?
>
> Of course I could buy a new processor fa
Hello,
Laszlo Nagy wrote:
This server is an X terminal server and the users connect to it with 'X
-query '. Can I do something to reduce the load on the CPU?
"gnome-volume-manage" uses 99% of the CPU, constantly - why?
--Alex
You can try to trace them, what they are doing, what functions ar
Laszlo Nagy wrote:
Check out healthd or mbmon. One or other has worked OK for me on
other Asus boards, and both are in ports (sysutils/ I think).
If you have ACPI and your board supports thermal zones, then you can
check those.
sysctl -a | egrep 'acpi.*therm'
or
sysctl -a | egrep 'a
On Thu, 21 Jun 2007, Laszlo Nagy wrote:
Hi,
My FreeBSD 6.2 server restarts suddenly once or twice a day. I believe it is
because the processor is overheated, but I'm not sure. Is there a way to
check this from software? I would like to install a hardware monitor program
that can lo
Check out healthd or mbmon. One or other has worked OK for me on
other Asus boards, and both are in ports (sysutils/ I think).
If you have ACPI and your board supports thermal zones, then you can
check those.
sysctl -a | egrep 'acpi.*therm'
or
sysctl -a | egrep 'acpi.*tz'
one or othe
Laszlo Nagy wrote:
Hi,
My FreeBSD 6.2 server restarts suddenly once or twice a day. I believe
it is because the processor is overheated, but I'm not sure. Is there
a way to check this from software? I would like to install a hardware
monitor program that can log out processor temper
Hi,
My FreeBSD 6.2 server restarts suddenly once or twice a day. I believe
it is because the processor is overheated, but I'm not sure. Is there a
way to check this from software? I would like to install a hardware
monitor program that can log out processor temperature in every minute.
Gary,
You're right.
I could recompile the kernel now, however lmmon is not returning
any value, neither healthd is.
The relevant part of dmesg is:
ichsmb0: port 0xefa0-0xefaf irq 17
at device 31.3 on pci0
smbus0: on ichsmb0
smb0: on smbus0
- Marcelo Souza
On Tue, 26
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> |device ichsmb
> |
> |
> |I get this error messages:
> |
> |In file included from /usr/src/sys/dev/ichsmb/ichsmb.c:64:
> |/usr/src/sys/dev/ichsmb/ichsmb_var.h:44:22: smbus_if.h: No such file or
Looks like you forgot to read the ichsmb manpage or the conf/NOT
Hi,
Just to put a subject...
On Tue, 26 Jul 2005 [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
|Hi All,
|
|
| I´m trying to enable the hardware monitoring with "lmmon" on an
|Intel server board, based on ICH2 chipset, but when I put the following
|line in the kernel config file:
|
|
|device ic
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