xref: /freebsd/share/man/man4/aibs.4 (revision 81ad6265)
1.\"	$FreeBSD$
2.\"	$NetBSD: aibs.4,v 1.2 2010/02/09 05:37:25 cnst Exp $
3.\"	$OpenBSD: aibs.4,v 1.4 2009/07/30 06:30:45 jmc Exp $
4.\"
5.\" Copyright (c) 2009/2010 Constantine A. Murenin <cnst++@FreeBSD.org>
6.\"
7.\" Permission to use, copy, modify, and distribute this software for any
8.\" purpose with or without fee is hereby granted, provided that the above
9.\" copyright notice and this permission notice appear in all copies.
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11.\" THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS" AND THE AUTHOR DISCLAIMS ALL WARRANTIES
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14.\" ANY SPECIAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES OR ANY DAMAGES
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17.\" OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE USE OR PERFORMANCE OF THIS SOFTWARE.
18.\"
19.Dd April 4, 2010
20.Dt AIBS 4
21.Os
22.Sh NAME
23.Nm aibs
24.Nd "ASUSTeK AI Booster ACPI ATK0110 voltage, temperature and fan sensor"
25.Sh SYNOPSIS
26To compile this driver into the kernel,
27place the following line in your
28kernel configuration file:
29.Bd -ragged -offset indent
30.Cd "device aibs"
31.Ed
32.Pp
33Alternatively, to load the driver as a
34module at boot time, place the following line in
35.Xr loader.conf 5 :
36.Bd -literal -offset indent
37aibs_load="YES"
38.Ed
39.Sh DESCRIPTION
40The
41.Nm
42driver provides support for the voltage, temperature and fan sensors
43available through the
44.Tn ATK0110
45.Tn ASOC
46.Tn ACPI
47device
48on
49.Tn ASUSTeK
50motherboards.
51The number of sensors of each type,
52as well as the description of each sensor,
53varies according to the motherboard.
54.Pp
55The driver supports an arbitrary set of sensors,
56provides descriptions regarding what each sensor is used for,
57and reports the current values as well as
58the supposed range specifications of each sensor's input
59as defined by the motherboard manufacturer through
60.Tn ACPI .
61.Pp
62The range specifications are as follows:
63.Bl -bullet
64.It
65Voltage sensors have a lower and an upper range specification.
66.It
67Temperature sensors have two upper specifications.
68.It
69Fan sensors may either have only the lower specification,
70or, depending on the
71.Tn DSDT ,
72one lower and one upper specification.
73.El
74.Pp
75Sensor readings and the range specifications are made available through the
76.Xr sysctl 3
77interface,
78and can be monitored with
79.Xr sysctl 8 .
80For example, on an ASUS V3-P5G965 barebone:
81.Bd -literal -offset indent
82> sysctl dev.aibs.0.{volt,temp,fan}
83dev.aibs.0.volt.0: 1192 850 1600
84dev.aibs.0.volt.1: 3312 2970 3630
85dev.aibs.0.volt.2: 5017 4500 5500
86dev.aibs.0.volt.3: 12302 10200 13800
87dev.aibs.0.temp.0: 28.0C 80.0C 95.0C
88dev.aibs.0.temp.1: 55.0C 60.0C 95.0C
89dev.aibs.0.fan.0: 878 600 7200
90dev.aibs.0.fan.1: 0 700 7200
91.Pp
92> sysctl -d dev.aibs.0.{volt,temp,fan}
93dev.aibs.0.volt:
94dev.aibs.0.volt.0: Vcore Voltage
95dev.aibs.0.volt.1:  +3.3 Voltage
96dev.aibs.0.volt.2:  +5 Voltage
97dev.aibs.0.volt.3:  +12 Voltage
98dev.aibs.0.temp:
99dev.aibs.0.temp.0: CPU Temperature
100dev.aibs.0.temp.1: MB Temperature
101dev.aibs.0.fan:
102dev.aibs.0.fan.0: CPU FAN Speed
103dev.aibs.0.fan.1: CHASSIS FAN Speed
104.Ed
105.Pp
106Generally, sensors provided by the
107.Nm
108driver may also be supported by certain other drivers or utilities
109that access the
110.Tn ISA /
111.Tn LPC
112or
113.Tn I2C /
114.Tn SMBus
115devices directly.
116The precise collection of
117.Nm
118sensors is comprised of the sensors
119specifically utilised in the motherboard
120design, which may be supported through
121a combination of one or more physical hardware monitoring chips.
122.Pp
123The
124.Nm
125driver, however, provides the following advantages
126when compared to the native hardware monitoring drivers or other utilities:
127.Bl -bullet
128.It
129Sensor values from
130.Nm
131are expected to be more reliable.
132For example, voltage sensors in many hardware monitoring chips
133can only sense voltage from 0 to 2 or 4 volts, and the excessive
134voltage is removed by the resistors, which may vary with the motherboard
135and with the voltage that is being sensed.
136In
137.Nm ,
138the required resistor factors are provided by
139the motherboard manufacturer through
140.Tn ACPI ;
141in the native drivers, the resistor factors
142are encoded into the driver based on the chip manufacturer's recommendations.
143In essence, sensor values from
144.Nm
145are very likely to be identical to the readings from the
146Hardware Monitor screen in the BIOS.
147.It
148Sensor descriptions from
149.Nm
150are more likely to match the markings on the motherboard.
151.It
152Sensor range specifications are supported by
153.Nm .
154The range specification is reported
155for each individual sensor as suggested by the motherboard manufacturer.
156For example, the threshold for the CPU temperature sensor is likely
157to be significantly higher than that for the chassis temperature sensor.
158.It
159Support for newer chips in
160.Nm .
161Newer chips may miss a native driver,
162but should be supported through
163.Nm
164regardless.
165.El
166.Sh SEE ALSO
167.Xr sysctl 3 ,
168.Xr acpi 4 ,
169.Xr sysctl 8
170.Sh HISTORY
171The
172.Nm
173driver first appeared in
174.Ox 4.7 ,
175.Dx 2.5 ,
176.Nx 6.0
177and
178.Fx 9.0 .
179.Pp
180An earlier version of the driver,
181.Nm acpi_aiboost ,
182first appeared in
183.Fx 7.0
184and
185.Nx 5.0 .
186.Sh AUTHORS
187.An -nosplit
188The
189.Nm
190driver was written for
191.Ox ,
192.Dx ,
193.Nx
194and
195.Fx
196by
197.An Constantine A. Murenin Aq Mt cnst@FreeBSD.org ,
198Raouf Boutaba Research Group,
199David R. Cheriton School of Computer Science,
200University of Waterloo.
201.Pp
202An earlier version of the driver, named
203.Nm acpi_aiboost ,
204was written for
205.Fx
206by
207.An Takanori Watanabe .
208