Call for testers: New acpi_ibm driver
Kevin Oberman
oberman at es.net
Thu Jun 2 11:30:08 PDT 2005
> From: Arne Schwabe <arne at rfc2549.org>
> Date: Thu, 02 Jun 2005 12:06:12 +0200
>
> "Kevin Oberman" <oberman at es.net> writes:
>
>
> > hw.acpi.ibm.initialmask: 2060
> > hw.acpi.ibm.availmask: 2252
> > hw.acpi.ibm.events: 0
> > hw.acpi.ibm.eventmask: 2060
> > hw.acpi.ibm.hotkey: 288
> > hw.acpi.ibm.lcd_brightness: 7
> > hw.acpi.ibm.volume: 9
> > hw.acpi.ibm.mute: 0
> > hw.acpi.ibm.thinklight: 0
> > hw.acpi.ibm.bluetooth: 0
> > hw.acpi.ibm.wlan: 0
> > hw.acpi.ibm.fan_rpm: 3738
> > hw.acpi.ibm.fan_status: 1
> > hw.acpi.ibm.thermal: 48 49 50 -1 32 31 26 28
> >
> > I'm still trying to track down which thermal is which.
>
> You could start by removing the batteries and see if that makes a
> difference.
Sorry. I should have posted that the first value is the CPU. The fifth
and seventh are the primary battery and the sixth and eighth are the
second battery. The secondary battery values are only the battery
and not the bay as I get -1 for 6 and 8 even when I
have a disk drive plugged in. I have no idea where the two sensors are
located, though. They are usually several degrees apart.
So I have 5 values out of 8. One is not present (always -1). That leaves
2 "real" values to chase down. I'm guessing:
CPU, MiniPCI, HDD, Unused, Battery1A, Battery2A, Battery1B, Battery2B.
But I can;t be sure. This is just based on other reports.
--
R. Kevin Oberman, Network Engineer
Energy Sciences Network (ESnet)
Ernest O. Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (Berkeley Lab)
E-mail: oberman at es.net Phone: +1 510 486-8634
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