![]() ![]() Fan speed (again, requires lm-sensors to be installed).Hard Disk Drives (requires hddtemp to be installed).psensor is a graphical front-end for temperature monitoring, which visualizes temperature readings from CPUs, NVidia/ATI/AMD GPUs. hddtemp is a tool that can measure the temperature of hard drives from S.M.A.R.T. motherboard and CPU sensors ( requires lm-sensors to be installed). lm-sensors is a software tool that draws from hardware embedded sensors to monitor temperatures, voltage, humidity and fans.Desktop items are more than likely to get their information from this package.Īn example If you want something that depends on a desktop Lm-sensors is sort of the basic of any temperature measuring. The config file for this is located at /etc/nf To install the sensord daemon you will likely have to install the sensord package. So it includes graphics like this that can be shown through a webserver: Lm-sensors has a daemon, called sensord, that uses RRDtool for 'data logging and graphing system for time series data'. Very useful for systems automation (in the home, workshop, weather station, you name it). Easily measure various types of data (rotational speeds, voltages, temperatures, etc.) using cheap off-the-shelf parts. using off-the-shelf components and utilizing a range of bus interfaces (e.g. These can use this package to monitor voltages, temperatures, fan speeds, etc. That way, you can be alerted within seconds of a failing critical component such as a power supply, fan, other cooling mechanism, or even detect if the case has been opened. ![]() Easily create a cron job to query the status of your hardware and email you in the event of a problem before it becomes critical. Unattended high-end server, router or other mission-critical machine automated monitoring.This package contains programs to help you set up and read data fromįrom their project page (2016 edit: project is dead. You to access information from temperature, voltage, and fan speed From the description: Lm-sensors is a hardware health monitoring package for Linux. If you want something that does not depend on a desktop: ![]()
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