NAME
lm
—
National Semiconductor LM78/79/81
temperature, voltage, and fan sensor
SYNOPSIS
lm0 at isa? port 0x290
lm1 at isa? port 0x280
lm2 at isa? port 0x310
lm* at iic?
lm* at wbsio?
DESCRIPTION
The lm
driver provides support for the
National Semiconductor LM78/79/81 hardware monitors and register compatible
chips to be used with the
sysctl(8) interface.
The original LM78 hardware monitor supports 11 sensors:
Sensor | Units | Typical Use |
IN0 |
uV DC | Core voltage |
IN1 |
uV DC | Unknown |
IN2 |
uV DC | +3.3V |
IN3 |
uV DC | +5V |
IN4 |
uV DC | +12V |
IN5 |
uV DC | -12V |
IN6 |
uV DC | -5V |
Temp |
uK | Motherboard Temperature |
Fan0 |
RPM | Fan |
Fan1 |
RPM | Chassis Fan |
Fan2 |
RPM | Fan |
For other devices, sensors' names and numbers will be different.
HARDWARE
Chips supported by the lm
driver
include:
- ASUS AS99127F
- National Semiconductor LM78 and LM78-J
- National Semiconductor LM79
- National Semiconductor LM81
- Nuvoton NCT6776F
- Winbond W83627HF, W83627THF, W83637HF and W83697HF
- Winbond W83627DHG and W83627EHF
- Winbond W83781D, W83782D and W83783S
- Winbond W83791D, W83791SD and W83792D
Some devices can attach to both
iic(4) and isa(4); others can only attach to either one or the other. If
the lm
driver detects a device attaching to both
iic(4) and isa(4), it will detach the device from
iic(4).
SEE ALSO
HISTORY
The lm
driver first appeared in
NetBSD 1.5; OpenBSD support
was added in OpenBSD 3.4.
AUTHORS
The lm
driver was written by
Bill Squier and ported to OpenBSD
3.4 by Alexander Yurchenko
⟨grange@openbsd.org⟩. The driver was largely rewritten for
OpenBSD 3.9 by Mark Kettenis
⟨kettenis@openbsd.org⟩.
CAVEATS
Some vendors connect these chips to non-standard thermal diodes and resistors. This will result in bogus sensor values.
BUGS
Interrupt support is unimplemented.
There are currently no known pnpbios IDs assigned to LM chips.
This driver attaches to the Winbond W83791SD chip even though that chip does not have any sensors.