NAME¶
sensord - Sensor information logging daemon.
SYNOPSIS¶
sensord [ options ] [ chips ]
DESCRIPTION¶
Sensord is a daemon that can be used to periodically log sensor readings
from hardware health-monitoring chips to
syslog(3) or a round-robin
database (RRD) and to alert when a sensor alarm is signalled; for example, if
a fan fails, a temperature limit is exceeded, etc.
OPTIONS¶
- -i, --interval time
- Specify the interval between scanning for sensor alarms;
the default is to scan every minute.
The time should be specified as a raw integer (seconds) or with a suffix `s'
for seconds, `m' for minutes or `h' for hours; for example, the default
interval is `60' or `1m'.
Specify an interval of zero to suppress scanning explicitly for alarms.
- -l, --log-interval time
- Specify the interval between logging all sensor readings;
the default is to log all readings every half hour.
The time is specified as before; e.g., `30m'.
Specify an interval of zero to suppress logging of regular sensor
readings.
- -t, --rrd-interval time
- Specify the interval between logging all sensor readings to
a round-robin database; the default is to log all readings every five
minutes if a round-robin database is configured.
The time is specified as before; e.g., `5m'.
- -T, --rrd-no-average
- Specify that the round-robin database should not be
averaged.
- -r, --rrd-file file
- Specify a round-robin database into which to log all sensor
readings; e.g., `/var/log/sensord.rrd'. This database will be created if
it does not exist. By default, no round-robin database is used.
See the section ROUND ROBIN DATABASES below for more details.
- -c, --config-file file
- Specify a libsensors(3) configuration file. If no
file is specified, the libsensors default configuration file is used.
- -p, --pid-file file
- Specify what PID file to write; the default is to write the
file `/var/run/sensord.pid'. You should always specify an absolute path
here. The file is removed when the daemon exits.
- -f, --syslog-facility facility
- Specify the syslog(3) facility to use when logging
sensor readings and alarms; the default is to use daemon.
Other possible facilities include local0 through local7, and
user.
- -g, --rrd-cgi directory
- Prints out a sample rrdcgi(1) CGI script that can be
used to display graphs of recent sensor information in a Web page, and
exits. You must specify the world-writable, Web-accessible directory where
the graphs should be stored; the CGI script assumes that this will be
accessed under the `/sensord/' directory on the Webserver. See the section
ROUND ROBIN DATABASES below for more details.
- -a, --load-average
- Include the load average in the RRD database. You should
also specify this flag when you create the CGI script.
- -d, --debug
- Prints a small amount of additional debugging
information.
- -h, --help
- Prints a help message and exits.
- -v, --version
- Displays the program version and exits.
CHIPS¶
To restrict the devices that are scanned by this daemon, you may optionally
specify a list of chip names. By default, all available chips are scanned.
A typical chip name would be `w83782d-*' (you may want to escape the `*' for
your shell) which would scan any W83782D chips on any bus. See
sensors.conf(5) for more details. Another option is to simply not load
the sensor modules for chips in which you have no interest.
SIGNALS¶
Upon receipt of a SIGTERM (see
signal(7) for details) this daemon should
gracefully shut down.
Upon receipt of a SIGHUP, this daemon will rescan the kernel interface for chips
and features, and reload the libsensors configuration file.
LOGGING¶
All messages from this daemon are logged to
syslog(3) under the program
name `sensord' and facility
daemon, or whatever is specified on the
command line.
Regular sensor readings are logged at the level
info. Alarms are logged
at the level
alert. Inconsequential status messages are logged at the
minimum level,
debug, when debugging is enabled.
You can use an appropriate `/etc/syslog.conf' file to direct these messages in a
useful manner. See
syslog.conf(5) for full details. Assuming you set
the logging facility to local4, the following is a sample configuration:
-
# Sample syslog.conf entries
*.info;...;local4.none;local4.warn /var/log/messages
local4.info -/var/log/sensors
local4.alert /dev/console
local4.alert *
The first line ensures that regular sensor readings do not clutter
`/var/log/messages'; we first say `local4.none' to eliminate informational
messages; then `local4.warn' to enable warnings and above. The second line
says to log all regular sensor readings to `/var/log/sensors'; the leading
hyphen `-' means that this file is not flushed after every message. The final
two lines ensure that alarms are printed to the system console as well as to
all connected users (in addition to `/var/log/messages' and
`/var/log/sensors').
LOG ROTATION¶
On a typical system with a good sensor chip, expect about 2KB per sensor reading
in the log file. This works out at about 3MB per month. You should be rotating
your syslog files anyway, but just to be sure you'll want to use something
like
logrotate(8) or equivalent. You might, for example, want an entry
in `/etc/logrotate.d/syslog' containing:
-
# Sample logrotate.d entry
/var/log/sensors {
postrotate
/usr/sbin/killall -HUP syslogd
endscript
}
Note, of course, that you want to restart
syslogd(8) and not
sensord(8)
ALARMS¶
Alarms generally indicate a critical condition; for example, a fan failure or an
unacceptable temperature or voltage. However, some sensor chips do not support
alarms, while others are incorrectly configured and may signal alarms
incorrectly.
Note that some drivers may lack support for alarm reporting even though the
chips they support do have alarms. As of Linux 2.6.23, many drivers still
don't report alarms in a format suitable for libsensors 3.
BEEPS¶
If you see `(beep)' beside any sensor reading, that just means that your system
is configured to issue an audio warning from the motherboard if an alarm is
signalled on that sensor.
ROUND ROBIN DATABASES¶
Sensord(8) provides support for storing sensor readings in a round-robin
database. This may be a useful alternative to the use of
syslog(3).
Round-robin databases are constant-size databases that can be used to store, for
example, a week's worth of sensor readings. Subsequent readings stored in the
database will overwrite readings that are over a week old. This capability is
extremely useful because it allows useful information to be stored in an
easily-accessible manner for a useful length of time, without the burden of
ever-growing log files.
The
rrdtool(1) utility and its associated library provide the basic
framework for the round-robin database beneath
sensord(8). In addition,
the
rrdcgi(1) and
rrdgraph(1) utilities provide support for
generating graphs of these data for display in a Web page.
If you wish to use the default configuration of round-robin database, which
holds one week of sensor readings at five-minute intervals, then simply start
sensord(8) and specify where you want the database stored. It will
automatically be created and configured using these default parameters.
If you wish readings to be stored for a longer period, or want multiple readings
to be averaged into each database entry, then you must manually create and
configure the database before starting
sensord(8). Consult the
rrdcreate(1) manual for details. Note that the database must match
exactly the names and order of sensors read by
sensord(8). It is
recommended that you create the default database and then use
rrdinfo(1) to obtain this information, and/or
rrdtune(1) to
change it.
After creating the round-robin database, you must then configure your Web server
to display the sensor information. This assumes that you have a Web server
preconfigured and functioning on your machine.
Sensord(8) provides a
command-line option
--rrd-cgi to generate a basic CGI script to display
these graphs; you can then customize this script as desired. Consult the
rrdcgi(1) manual for details. This CGI script requires a
world-writable, Web-accessible directory into which to write the graphs that
it generates.
An example of how to set up Web-accessible graphs of recent sensor readings
follows:
-
sensord --log-interval 0 \
--load-average \
--rrd-file /var/log/sensord.rrd
Here, we start
sensord(8) and configure it to store readings in a
round-robin database; note that we disable logging of sensor readings to
syslog(3), and enable logging of the load average.
-
mkdir /var/www/sensord
chown www-data:staff /var/www/sensord
chmod a=rwxs /var/www/sensord
Here, we create a world-writable, Web-accessible directory in which graphs will
be stored; we set the ownership and permissions on this directory
appropriately. You will have to determine the location and ownership that is
appropriate for your machine.
-
sensord --load-average \
--rrd-file /var/log/sensord.rrd \
--rrd-cgi /var/www/sensord \
> /usr/lib/cgi-bin/sensord.cgi
chmod a+rx /usr/lib/cgi-bin/sensord.cgi
Here, we create a CGI script that will display sensor readings from the
database. You must specify the location of the round-robin database, the
location of the directory where the images should be stored, and whether you
want the load average displayed. The
--rrd-cgi command-line parameter
causes
sensord(8) to display a suitable CGI script on
stdout and
then to exit. You will need to write this script to the CGI bin directory of
your Web server, and edit the script if the image directory you chose is not
the `/sensord/' directory of your Web server.
Finally, you should be able to view your sensor readings from the URL
`
http://localhost/cgi-bin/sensord.cgi'.
MODULES¶
It is expected that all required sensor modules are loaded prior to this daemon
being started. This can either be achieved with a system specific module
loading scheme (e.g., listing the required modules in the file `/etc/modules'
under Debian).
ERRORS¶
Errors encountered by this daemon are logged to
syslogd(8) after which
the daemon will exit.
BUGS¶
Round-robin database support doesn't cope with multiple sensor chips having
duplicate sensor labels.
FILES¶
/etc/sensors3.conf
/etc/sensors.conf
/etc/syslog.conf
SEE ALSO¶
sensors.conf(5)
AUTHORS¶
Sensord was written by Merlin Hughes <merlin@merlin.org>. Basics of
round-robin databases were misappropriated from Mark D. Studebaker.