This is a list of additional programs, that may or may not be installed by `make install', and that usually can be found in the `prog' directory of this package. * prog/config/grab_busses.sh (written in bash and awk, not installed) This program helps you generate the `bus' statements for your configuration file. It read /proc/bus/i2c (or the file specified on the command-line), and prints to stdout `bus' statements reflecting the currently detected adapters. * prog/daemon/healthd.sh (written in bash, not installed) An example of a very simple hardware health monitoring daemon. * prog/detect/sensors-detect (written in Perl, installed by 'make install') This program tries to detect the available SMBus adapters and the chips connected to them and/or the ISA bus. It also generates modprobe lines and module options. This program is interactive and will ask you about all information it needs. * prog/detect/i2cdetect (written in C, not installed) This program scans your complete I2C or SMBus adapter for connected devices. Not all devices can be detected in this way, though; and it may hang your bus. Syntax: ./i2cdetect 0 Here the '0' stands for i2c-0 (check /proc/bus/i2c to find out which bus you need). * prog/doc/doc-features.pl (written in Perl, not installed) This program is used to help us generate driver documentation; it scans some C source programs to do this. Syntax: ./doc-features.pl BASE [PREFIX...] BASE is the path to the base directory of the lm_sensors tree PREFIX is one of more prefixes of chips you want documented; if left out, all chips are documented. * prog/doc/doc-insmod.pl (written in Perl, not installed) This program is used to help us generate driver documentation; it reads all module information and outputs insmod parameter information. Syntax: ./doc-insmod.pl DRIVER * prog/dump/i2cdump (written in C, not installed) This program helps to dump the registers of a I2C device that understands the 'byte data' or 'word data' SMBus protocols. Usual syntax: ./i2cdump 0 0x49 b Here the '0' stands for i2c-0 (check /proc/bus/i2c to find out which bus you need), '0x49' is the device address, and 'b' or 'w' stands for byte or word data. * prog/dump/isadump (written in C, not installed) This program helps to dump the registers of LM78-like chips, or more exactly, chips which use an I/O-port for its address and one as its data register. Usual syntax: ./isadump 0x295 0x296 * prog/eeprom/decode-dimms.pl (written in Perl 5, not installed) This program decodes the information generated by the `eeprom.o' module. It will only work for the installed eeprom module from the src/ directory, not for the old one in the i2c/drivers/ directory. * prog/mkdev/mkdev.sh (written in bash, not installed) This script creates the /dev/i2c-* files. Please check the source before you run it, as you may need to set some variables first. * prog/sensord/sensord (written in C, installed by `make install-prog-sensord') This daemon can be used to periodically log sensor readings from the sensors hardware to syslog, and to alert (using syslog level ALERT) when a sensor alarm is signalled; for example, if a fan fails, a temperature limit is exceeded, etc. * prog/sensors/sensors (written in C, installed by `make install') This pretty-prints the information provided by the modules. It is a normal console application, using stdin and stdout. It is essential, because unlike the raw /proc/sys/dev/sensors/*/* files, it takes your configuration file into account. * prog/xeon/decode-xeon.pl (written in perl, not installed) ID ROM data decoding for Xeon processors.