On Tue, Mar 15, 2016 at 11:27:13AM -0700, Jeremiah Rothschild wrote:
On Tue, Mar 15, 2016 at 06:04:11PM +0000, Richard W.M. Jones wrote:
On Sun, Mar 13, 2016 at 02:58:42PM +0000, Gordan Bobic wrote:
On 13/03/16 14:20, Michael Howard wrote:
On 13/03/2016 07:34, Gordan Bobic wrote:
Does anyone have any input on what (if any) lm_sensors drivers can be used? Probing tends to result in crashing the machine. Is there something other than ipmi available?
You'll probably find it's the default kernel causing the crash, it'll likely work with your new kernel, it does here.
No, still causes a crash: Do you want to scan for Super I/O sensors? (YES/no): Probing for Super-I/O at 0x2e/0x2f Trying family `National Semiconductor/ITE'... Message from syslogd@orcone at Mar 13 14:34:18 ... kernel:Internal error: : 96000010 [#1] SMP
I'm able to reproduce this, or something very similar, with:
kernel-4.5.0-0.rc7.31.el7.aarch64 lm_sensors-3.3.4-11.el7.aarch64
The kernel is a pre-release internal build of RHELSA, but is basically very similar to the upstream kernel.
I have opened a bug about it:
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1318002
What kernel & lm_sensors versions do you have?
FWIW, I crashed my server similarly the other day -- without lm_sensors installed.
I can't find the command in my `history' anymore but, IIRC, the command was something like:
modprobe ipmi_si trydefaults=0
Err, sorry. trydefaults=1. That then kicked off the kernel errors to syslogd.
This is with kernel-4.2.0-0.26.el7.1.aarch64.
Rich.
-- Richard Jones, Virtualization Group, Red Hat http://people.redhat.com/~rjones Read my programming and virtualization blog: http://rwmj.wordpress.com virt-builder quickly builds VMs from scratch http://libguestfs.org/virt-builder.1.html _______________________________________________ Arm-dev mailing list Arm-dev@centos.org https://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/arm-dev
Arm-dev mailing list Arm-dev@centos.org https://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/arm-dev