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Feedback and Support
As most open source projects we appreciate feedback from our users, and we try to help as time permits. Use one of the following ways to get in contact:
Mailing Lists
We have two lists, one dedicated to the Linux i2c subsystem and bus drivers: i2c <at> lm-sensors <dot> org, and one dedicated to hardware monitoring under Linux: lm-sensors <at> lm-sensors <dot> org.
Do not post the same message to both lists. We made two lists for a reason. Find out where your report fits best, and post only to that list. The i2c list is for problem reports and discussions about i2c-core, i2c-dev, i2c bus drivers and other issues related to the i2c subsystem. The lm-sensors list, on the other hand, is suitable for problem reports and discussions about the hwmon subsystem, hardware monitoring (sensors) chip drivers, libsensors and sensors.
These lists are intended for both development discussions and user support. You do not require to be subscribed to post. You can subscribe, manage your subscription options or unsubscribe here. We prefer plain text over HTML mails. Beware that attachments of types other than text/plain and text/x-patch are filtered out.
Posts to the mailing lists are archived: i2c and lm-sensors. In addition there is a more comfortable lm-sensors archive hosted by gmane.org.
IRC
You can meet us on IRC, in channel #linux-sensors on Freenode. The best times to find us on IRC are approximately 13:00 - 16:00 UTC weekends and 18:00 - 20:00 UTC weekdays; no guarantees of course!
Support Ticket
We use the ticket facility to keep track of support requests, bug reports, feature wishes and submitted patches. You can browse all currently open tickets or create a new ticket.
Note: In order to get rid of spammers, we had to block anonymous creation and edition of support tickets. We created a fake account you have to use instead. First log in with name "ticket" and password "need help" (in one word), then you can create a new ticket and later edit it. Put to CC: your mail please, so that you get a notification when a change occurs. Beware that your e-mail address will be visible to the public.
