From mboxrd@z Thu Jan 1 00:00:00 1970 From: Jean Delvare Date: Thu, 24 Jun 2010 07:18:20 +0000 Subject: Re: [lm-sensors] sensors.conf for DFI LP MI P55-T36 (it8720-*) Message-Id: <20100624091820.6f4025f7@hyperion.delvare> List-Id: References: <20100606154919.4066.qmail@mailserver01.ottosenfx.dk> In-Reply-To: <20100606154919.4066.qmail@mailserver01.ottosenfx.dk> MIME-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii" Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit To: lm-sensors@vger.kernel.org Hi Lars, On Thu, 24 Jun 2010 08:40:06 +0200, Jean Delvare wrote: > I was specifically interested in the value of register 0x1f. the lower > 2 bits control internal routing and scaling of in3 and in7. The IT8720F > datasheet documents the default value of this register as 0x03, but > many boards I've see had value 0x01, which isn't correct because in7 > should _always_ be routed internally (the chip has no physical pin for > in7!). > > The bottom line is that your chip is properly configured and won't be > affected by the fix I'm working on. > > Also note that you could improve your configuration file by adding the > following: > > label in3 "+5V" > label in7 "5VSB" > compute in3 @ * (6.8/10+1), @ / (6.8/10+1) > compute in7 @ * (6.8/10+1), @ / (6.8/10+1) Oh, and while we're here, in4 is +12V. This is confirmed by this snapshot I've found: http://img19.imageshack.us/img19/6122/dmip55os2.png The only missing thing is the scaling factor. Apparently it's not the standard one, otherwise it would read between +10.48 V and +11.32 V on your system, which is definitely too low. Is +12V really not displayed in the hardware monitoring section of your BIOS? This is very surprising. I suppose you don't have Windows running on your machine for comparison with the DFI software? -- Jean Delvare _______________________________________________ lm-sensors mailing list lm-sensors@lm-sensors.org http://lists.lm-sensors.org/mailman/listinfo/lm-sensors