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Several More ASUS Motherboards Will Enjoy Sensor Monitoring With Linux 6.2

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  • #11
    Originally posted by denisdevelops View Post

    Could use please share such information in https://bugzilla.kernel.org/show_bug.cgi?id=204807?
    ...
    Sorry for the late reply and thanks for the detailed instructions.
    Unfortunately I do not own an AM5 motherboard. I wanted to express that I'm waiting for support before buying anything.
    Currently I'm on a Gigabyte X570 Aorus Master with ITE SuperIO chips and I'm pretty sure you are not interested in bug reports for those - although I'd be super-happy if someone cared about Gigabyte as you do for ASUS.

    So a big thanks to you for your effort (assuming that you are involved with the development :-) ).

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    • #12
      Originally posted by mazumoto View Post
      Sorry for the late reply and thanks for the detailed instructions.
      Unfortunately I do not own an AM5 motherboard. I wanted to express that I'm waiting for support before buying anything.
      Currently I'm on a Gigabyte X570 Aorus Master with ITE SuperIO chips and I'm pretty sure you are not interested in bug reports for those - although I'd be super-happy if someone cared about Gigabyte as you do for ASUS.

      So a big thanks to you for your effort (assuming that you are involved with the development :-) ).
      Thank you!

      Gigabyte also has community supported upstreamed drivers https://github.com/t-8ch/linux-gigabyte-wmi-driver

      New boards will be unsupported for some time, like B660/X670 boards are unsupported because ASUS has changed wmi interfaces. And support will require some luck and reverse engineering.

      And by luck i mean big amount of bug reports and someone who own board and ready to test :-)

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      • #13
        Originally posted by denisdevelops View Post
        Gigabyte also has community supported upstreamed drivers https://github.com/t-8ch/linux-gigabyte-wmi-driver
        I think they're not nearly as active as you / the ASUS community: https://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux...gigabyte-wmi.c
        And as far as I understood, you managed to get secure access to the disputed ACPI regions that are used by the sensors via a firmware-provided semaphore. Thus making acpi_resources=lax unnecessary. It doesn't seem to me that this is possible on the Gigabyte side of things, since there is no support at all from them or their SuperIO manufacturer ITE.

        This is why I'll quite probably get an ASUS motherboard next - although their B650E lineup is rather ... underwhelming and expensive.

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