sensor inside your CPU. Supported all are all known variants
of Intel Core family.
+config SENSORS_IBMAEM
+ tristate "IBM Active Energy Manager temperature/power sensors and control"
+ select IPMI_SI
+ depends on IPMI_HANDLER
+ help
+ If you say yes here you get support for the temperature and
+ power sensors and capping hardware in various IBM System X
+ servers that support Active Energy Manager. This includes
+ the x3350, x3550, x3650, x3655, x3755, x3850 M2, x3950 M2,
+ and certain HS2x/LS2x/QS2x blades.
+
+ This driver can also be built as a module. If so, the module
+ will be called ibmaem.
+
config SENSORS_IBMPEX
tristate "IBM PowerExecutive temperature/power sensors"
select IPMI_SI
tristate "National Semiconductor LM75 and compatibles"
depends on I2C
help
- If you say yes here you get support for National Semiconductor LM75
- sensor chips and clones: Dallas Semiconductor DS75 and DS1775 (in
- 9-bit precision mode), and TelCom (now Microchip) TCN75.
+ If you say yes here you get support for one common type of
+ temperature sensor chip, with models including:
+
+ - Dallas Semiconductor DS75 and DS1775
+ - Maxim MAX6625 and MAX6626
+ - Microchip MCP980x
+ - National Semiconductor LM75
+ - NXP's LM75A
+ - ST Microelectronics STDS75
+ - TelCom (now Microchip) TCN75
+ - Texas Instruments TMP100, TMP101, TMP75, TMP175, TMP275
+
+ This driver supports driver model based binding through board
+ specific I2C device tables.
- The DS75 and DS1775 in 10- to 12-bit precision modes will require
- a force module parameter. The driver will not handle the extra
- precision anyhow.
+ It also supports the "legacy" style of driver binding. To use
+ that with some chips which don't replicate LM75 quirks exactly,
+ you may need the "force" module parameter.
This driver can also be built as a module. If so, the module
will be called lm75.