wiki-grav/pages/02.linux/23.overclocking/04.monitoring/default.en.md
2022-06-23 14:34:20 +02:00

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Monitoring

Sensors

The lm_sensors package shows temperatures, fan pwm and other sensors for your CPU, GPU and motherboard.
Run $ sensors to get the output.

Support for motherboard ITE LPC chips

Support for this type of chip does not come built in to lm_sensors.
In the AUR the package it87-dkms-git provides a kernel module with support for a variety of ITE chips. It pulls from this git repo. You can find a list of supported chips there. See this issue on lm_sensors git repo for background info.

The kernel driver can be automatically loaded on boot by putting it87 into /etc/modules-load.d/(filename).conf
The option acpi_enforce_resources=lax also needs to be added to GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX_DEFAULT in /etc/default/grub or your bootloader equivalent.

CoreFreq

CoreFreq can display a lot of information about the CPU and the memory controller.

To run, the systemd service corefreqd needs to be enabled.
CoreFreq also depends on a kernel driver. Simply put corefreqk into /etc/modules-load.d/(filename).conf to load it automatically on boot.

Access the TUI using $ corefreq-cli

A few interesting views:
Shift + C shows per thread frequency, voltage and power, as well as overall power and temperature.
Shift + M shows the memory timings, frequency and DIMM layout.

CoreCtrl

CoreCtrl displays a range of information for AMD GPUs.

Error monitoring

Some applications have hardware error reporting built-in.

Kernel log

For others, try checking the kernel log.
$ journalctl -k --grep=mce

Rasdaemon

You can also install aur/rasdaemon and enable its two services.
# systemctl enable --now ras-mc-ctl.service
# systemctl enable --now rasdaemon.service

$ ras-mc-ctl --summary shows all historic errors
$ ras-mc-ctl --error-count shows memory errors of the current session