Difference between revisions of "CPU Temperature"

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It is useful to have this running continuously and also have it logging to a file. The following file will record the output of sensors and uptime (so you can monitor the load and get a timestamp) in a file, every 30 seconds  and display it on the screen (thanks to the magic of tee and an infinite loop).   
 
It is useful to have this running continuously and also have it logging to a file. The following file will record the output of sensors and uptime (so you can monitor the load and get a timestamp) in a file, every 30 seconds  and display it on the screen (thanks to the magic of tee and an infinite loop).   
  
  while [[ true ]] ; do uptime ; sensors ; sleep 30s; done | tee temp_load.log
+
  while [[ true ]] ; do uptime ; sensors ; sleep 30s; done | tee temp_load.log
 +
 
 +
Run that command in one terminal window and this in another:
 +
 
 +
 
 +
  stress --cpu 10 --io 4 --vm 10 --vm-bytes 10M --hdd 2 --timeout 4h
 +
 
 +
This will stress the machine for four hours, or until it crashes ;)
  
 
==More Information==
 
==More Information==

Revision as of 14:48, 17 March 2011

Overview

Systems that freeze after a period of use (but not when started cold) may be having problems with overheating. This is especially true for laptops. You can use lm-sensors to determine the temperature of the CPU.

Using lm-senors

Install and Configure lm-sensors
  • Install the lm-sensors package (see InstallingSoftware).
  • Run sudo sensors-detect and answer YES to all YES/no questions. I generally use the ISA bus rather than the SMBus bus, your choice to this question!.
  • At the end of sensors-detect, a list of modules that needs to be loaded will displayed. Type "yes" to have sensors-detect insert those modules into /etc/modules, or edit /etc/modules yourself.
  • Next, run "sudo /etc/init.d/module-init-tools". This will read the changes you made to /etc/modules in step 3, and insert the new modules into the kernel.
  • Run "sensors" to get temperature readings.

It is useful to have this running continuously and also have it logging to a file. The following file will record the output of sensors and uptime (so you can monitor the load and get a timestamp) in a file, every 30 seconds and display it on the screen (thanks to the magic of tee and an infinite loop).

while  [[ true ]] ; do uptime ; sensors ; sleep 30s; done | tee temp_load.log

Run that command in one terminal window and this in another:


 stress --cpu 10 --io 4 --vm 10 --vm-bytes 10M --hdd 2 --timeout 4h 

This will stress the machine for four hours, or until it crashes ;)

More Information

The ubuntu-maintained page can be found here.