Hardware :: CPU Temperature 75-79 Degree Celcius?
Jan 15, 2011I overclock my AMD Athlon X2 4800+ CPU to 5200+, clock speed increased by 10%, from original 2500GHz to 2750 GHz, and now the temperature is 75-79oC, is it too hot?
View 14 RepliesI overclock my AMD Athlon X2 4800+ CPU to 5200+, clock speed increased by 10%, from original 2500GHz to 2750 GHz, and now the temperature is 75-79oC, is it too hot?
View 14 RepliesIs there a way to convert the PYWWS temp output from Celsius to Fahrenheit?
View 4 Replies View RelatedFedora 12 64-bit
Asus mobo M4A78-E
Samsung 2494HM display
The captioned display support 90 deg rotation. Which software do I need to install? Tried editing /etc/X11/xorg.conf as;
Code:
Section "Device"
Identifier "Videocard0"
Driver "radeon"
Option "Rotate" "90"
Restart X and rotate the display 90 deg. It doesn't work.
I am doing my work integrated Master's degree. I want to do a project which can be either linux based application or adding a feature to the linux kernel as a kernel extension. Please give me some ideas for this. The duration of project is around 6 months along with my regular office work.
View 7 Replies View RelatedI'm using my F11 box primarily for browsing. And I have freakishly low RAM (256). All was good up until recently. Now Im experiencing a lot of HD access with a lot of grinding and HD light flashing at different intervals when going online. I've searched but found no mention of viruses that would do this. I would typically associate this with a lot of downloading, as with software update. However I've disabled this program (since the box was in a stable state for my intended purpose and I did not want to invite new maintenance).
Any ideas what could cause this? It can become so intensive that the mouse is practically disabled and any attempts to close a window take upwards of 15 minutes. I frequently receive the Firefox message that the application has become unresponsive, do I wish to kill the program or wait.
I have a Hp Touchsmart Tx2 with AMD processor and ATi graphics. I installed Ubuntu 10.10 (64 bit) last night for the second time, the first time i had this problem so i thought maybe another download and another install would help, and i have dual boot setup with windows vista on the other partition. So the install went fine but when i am at the home screen in Ubuntu and i click something like the wireless icon at the top, or the time at the top, or any of those icons the dropdown menu is displayed at a 45 degree angle or something.
Also the drop down menus in firefox will do it too, i'm sure others will as well. It is really wierd and i already installed the flxgr Ati driver (i think thats what its called) via the additional drivers application. Also when i open the terminal it is displayed at this same angle. The outline is perfect put the content inside is skewed. Also I should mention overall its just slow and laggy and the wifi cuts in and out. I took some pictures with my camera cause when i took a screen shot the menu for that was slanted and i couldn't see what the options were.
I really enjoyed using Apple's wireless Mighty Mouse and Magic mouse because of their ability to easily touch scroll 360 degrees. Unfortunately, Linux drivers are not provided for these mice.Is there an equivalent wireless mouse that works well in Linux? Ideally with native support or community provided drivers, etc.
View 2 Replies View RelatedIn my system, the temperature of the CPU can be known from the file,/sys/bus/acpi/devices/LNXTHERM:00/ thermal_zone/temp . But I have found that not all systems have this file. Is there a generic method to get the temperature. Installing a package for this purpose won't be a solution as I'm building a simple gnome-shell extension. Something that comes along with the kernel would be perfect.
What could be other files that can possibly store temperature information, so that it would work on most atleast if not all? Any help like the file that stores temperature on your particular system only would also be highly appreciated.
Does anybody know wich temperatures a VIA C7 processor can tolerate (max) ?
If i let the server run without the top: ~40C (104 Fahrenheit)
If i let the server run _with_ the top on: ~65C (149 Fahrenheit)
Someone over at silentpcreview.com suggests that the C7 can easely tolerate temperatures of 100C (212 Fahrenheit)
There is a question, i'd like to ask: is there any decent program to monitor HDD temperature for linux? WHy are they so few? Suse Install repositories do not show any that could be installed. I used to use hddtemp on my previous 11.2 gnome installation, but it seems now something gone wrong, and i cant get this program anymore through: "sudo apt-get install hddtemp" and receive "sudo: apt-get: command not found", so as i am a newbie i can barely guess what is wrong. maybe there are any other programs to get this thing running. Its really puzzling because every laptop user need such tool badly, and i do not understand why is there so many monitor tools for cpu temperature and not a single good for hard drive which is far more important than cpu temperature, that rises and drops constantly as soon as your fans are fine???
View 2 Replies View RelatedI installed opensuse 11.3 to my laptop.Toshiba L505-13w satellite. core i5 2.27 ghz , 4gb ram, 1gb ati display.I can't measure cpu temperature. I tried "acpi -t" and sensors but nothing happened.I also tried system information widgets from plasma menu.Still I can't see my cpu temperature. Can anyone help me about this problem? I want to see my cpu temp.
View 1 Replies View RelatedI've recently installed Karmic on my new machine with the following specs;
Asus M4A785TD-V EVO Motherboard
AMD Athlon II X4 620 2.6GHz
Crucial 4GB (2x2GB) DDR3
Coolermaster Elite 330 Case
Western Digital WD5000AAKS 500GB
I'm looking to install some sort of temperature monitoring for my cpu and have had luck using either lm-sensors or acpi. With lm sensors, I've followed the various how to's on the forum and am still coming back with nothing. Trying to add hardware monitoring to panel brings up a 'no sensors found!' error, and x-sensors just starts up with a blank screen.
'sensors' in terminal spits back this -
Code:
lou@lou-quad:~$ sensors
No sensors found!
Make sure you loaded all the kernel drivers you need.
Try sensors-detect to find out which these are.
lou@lou-quad:~$
I've added the relevant lines into etc/modules as per the last question during configuration but still no joy. I've just run 'sensors-detect and had a gander at the output, and I'm wondering if its as simple as no one has written a driver for my mobo yet.
[Code]...
So I just got a MSI 870A-G54 and have been trying to get the CPU temperature on the command line. I ran the following
Code:
sudo apt-get install lm-sensors hddtemp sensors-applet computertemp
And ran sensors-detect
Code:
sudo sensors-detect
# sensors-detect revision 5818 (2010-01-18 17:22:07 +0100)
# System: MSI MS-7599
# Board: MSI 870A-G54 (MS-7599)
[Code].....
So I would like to check out my cpu temperature in function of time. I've followed [URL]...gpu-en-ubuntu/ but unfortunately in the description it was for the old version of Ubuntu and despite having downloaded the program, I simply can't add it in the taskbar. I did in a terminal: sudo apt-get install sensors-applet. Then I installed a few remaining packets from synaptic. Now how do I run the program?
View 6 Replies View RelatedMy nVidia graphics card gets too hot to touch very quickly. Below is current statistics, but it is usually 93C.Is this too hot? Should I speed up the fan? How I do this without risking frying the thing?
View 10 Replies View Relatedi need a script that can log simultaneously the individual cpu core load and individual cpu core temp, like the "cpu core temp" software in window. write that script that can log these values for over a certain period of time with a fixed time of interval in between the two values?or is there any such tool in unix?
View 7 Replies View RelatedTrying to find the CPU temperature, I found this lm_sensors is what I need..I do this;
wget http://dl.lm-sensors.org/lm-sensors/releases/lm_sensors-3.2.0.tar.bz2
bzip2 -dv lm_sensors-3.2.0.tar.bz2
tar xvf lm_sensors-3.2.0.tar[code].....
openSUSE 11.4 64 bitsI have "sensors" package installed and configured with sensors-detect.The cpu temperature monitor plasmoid worked on kde 4.6.0 without problems but after installing 4.6.2 the monitor do not show any info.By running "sensor" from konsole I can see the temperature for both processors so it seems to be something related with the kde update
View 9 Replies View RelatedI'm using default KDE openSUSE 11.3 64 bit In windows I can see the temperature of my HP laptop (cpu I suppose). Is there a facility for viewing that in Linux / openSUSE. Maybe in KDE, maybe in Yast, wherever?
The reason is that my laptop's temperature and fan speed increases slowly when I convert large video files from one format to another and the computer eventually shuts down spontaneously when the temperature becomes critical. I'd like to watch this so I can prevent it. So I need the app.
I have a notebook with AMD Athlon 64 QL-62 2 cores CPU. Normally the temperature is 50-52 Celsius in idle but with Ubuntu 10.04 beta 2 idle temp is 60 Celsius. /proc/cpuinfo shows both cores on 1GHz which is good but still temp is higher than usual. I tried to find solution using Google but I didn't find anything.
View 1 Replies View RelatedIf I install Linux Mint 8 or Open Suse , temperature is 48 as windows mostly.If I install any other distro, temperature goes to 80-85 and fan is always On.Ive a laptop dell just bought it, dell studio 15, 4ghz ram dual core etc, a monster for linux but ive this problem, kinda annoying when you wanna have something silent and that doesnt become a furnace.
View 2 Replies View RelatedHow to control at what temperature the fan comes on and shuts off. I am running Jaunty on a Compaq 610 laptop.
View 4 Replies View RelatedI have tried lm-sensors and a few others, firefox just crashed.
Phenom II X6 1090T
MSI-890FXA-GD70 motherboard
Ubuntu 10.10
Senors:
k10temp-pci-00c3
Adapter: PCI adapter
temp1: +0.0C (high = +70.0C)
sensors-detect
Now follows a summary of the probes I have just done. Just press ENTER to continue:
Driver `k10temp' (autoloaded):
* Chip `AMD Family 10h thermal sensors' (confidence: 9)
No modules to load, skipping modules configuration.
Unloading i2c-dev... OK
There is a debugging panel on my motherboard, and I think that that displays the CPU temperature, although I am not sure.
I am using the standalone k10temp temperature sensor but it doesn't give the actual temperature of the cpu, just some "bogus" temp value that isn't very useful.Does anyone know how you can calculate the real temperature from this reading?
View 3 Replies View RelatedOver the course of this year, I've been upgrading my system. Started with a mobo/CPU/RAM/video swap, going to a quad core Phenom-II 955 with 4 Gigs of RAM and an Nvidia GT-240 video card. I then dialed up the clock on that CPU, taking it to 3.415 GHz from its nominal 3.2 GHz, and I overclocked the RAM to 1704 MHz from the system default of 1333 MHz. Then I stuffed another hard drive into the box (the sixth HD in the box). Then I shove another 4 Gigs of RAM into the system, for a total of 8 Gigs.
Over this entire exercise, I have not changed the power supply. It was a Coolermaster 500 Watt supply that has served me well and faithfully. I did a careful power budget of this system and concluded that it was sucking somewhere between 420 and 450 watts at full load. Hence, my PS was very marginal. Allowing for derating as the PS aged, I figured I was really close to the edge.
However, I was having no symptoms, so I went with it. My system sits in a room where the temperature is usually around 28 C, and it would idle with a CPU temperature of 40C. Well, I started having some symptoms that were consistent with inadequate power within the last few days. I wasn't terribly surprised at that, so I didn't complain about having to go and buy a new PS. I purchased a Coolermaster GX 750 Watt supply. This is a high efficiency unit.
Since installing it a couple of hours ago, my system is idling with a CPU temperature of 36C. Mobo temp appears unchanged. No changes to BIOS, overclocking is unchanged, and nothing in the system is different except the PS. The case is an Antec P182, which puts the power supply in the bottom of the case inside its own duct. So, the motherboard and CPU don't see any heat from the PS; all of that is exhausted along its own path.
It is too soon yet for me to know if my symptoms that caused me to change the PS are gone, but the temperature change is quite striking. I have no explanation for it. Does anyone else? Temperature is being reported using the sensors command. Mandriva 2010.1 system. Edit: I am also noticing 1 to 3 degree C drops in hard drive temps, while ambient temperature in this room is constant. There are 6 drives in this box, and their temp history has been pretty constant...
Trying to install Ubuntu from CD. I choose my language and hit Install and come to a black screen with the Ubuntu symbol glowing (loading everything I assume) and after a minute my screen fills up with messages saying my CPU Temperature is 99 (gets progressively higher) degrees. Is there something else I need to do before installing?
I have windows installed on my C drive and I'm planning on installing Linux on another blank drive. The Ubuntu version is the newest one (9.10) I think. I've got a Core i7, EVGA mobo, Nvidia 9600GT video card, and 6 gigs of memory. HDDs are all WD I believe, and the one I'm putting Linux on is 320 Gig.
I want to read the temperature of my cpu and fan speed using a c++ program and then plot it.
View 3 Replies View RelatedIs there any way to monitor ambient temperature over the net?
For example I want to put one thermometer in the front of the cabinet (cold isle) and one in the back (hot isle) and monitor them over the internet, or have them report to a linux box.
What is the best way to do that?
I'm a C newbie. Just wrote this temperature converter. I know it's very basic but, as it is, is there anything wrong with it? any things that are done incorrectly? It seems to work fine.
Code:
#include <stdio.h>
int main(void)
{
float fahr, celc, result;
int choice;
[Code]...
Quick background: the office in my shop is just a partitioned area so is subject to temperature and dust, just as the workshop area is. I've upgraded my desktop from an AMD Phenom II X4 955 which used to suffer overheating problems (despite regular cleaning) to an AMD FX-6300 on a Gigabyte 970A-D3P motherboard. For cooling I've fitted a Cooler Master Hyper TX3, plus various fans. Fresh install of Debian 8.3.
The cooler has certainly solved the overheating issues and the machine runs very quietly, rather than sounding like a 747 at take-off. But I'm now having some problems getting consistent reporting on temperatures.
The BIOS reports temperatures from the CPU which seem to be fairly consistently in the mid to high 30s (C).
lm-sensors and hddtemp have been installed.
sensors-detect reports (just the last section)
Code: Select allNow follows a summary of the probes I have just done.
Just press ENTER to continue:
Driver `k10temp' (autoloaded):
* Chip `AMD Family 15h thermal sensors' (confidence: 9)
Driver `fam15h_power' (autoloaded):
* Chip `AMD Family 15h power sensors' (confidence: 9)
[Code].....
psensor identifies AMD CPU and the NVidia GPU, apparently correctly, as it does the HDDs.
So, my problem is that the CPU temps reported by psensor and the panel app vary quite significantly with those that are reported in the BIOS. My thinking is that the BIOS is correct and that the software is either misreporting the temperatures or using the wrong sensors.
On the old machine I used to get a temperature from each core, just like in the BIOS, but now I'm only getting a single CPU reading.