I’ve migrated from Supervised Ubuntu to HassOS. I know, jumping the gun slightly. Just thought I’d get it over and done with, it was pretty painless.
Have got everything working with the exception of reading the CPU temp of the nuc.
I previously had this sensor:
sensor:
- platform: command_line
name: CPU Temperature
command: "cat /sys/class/thermal/thermal_zone0/temp"
unit_of_measurement: "°C"
value_template: '{{ value | multiply(0.001) | round(1) }}'
But this doesn’t work under HassOS.
When I run:
~ $ cat /sys/class/thermal/thermal_zone*/temp
In terminal/ssh I get:
cat: can’t open ‘/sys/class/thermal/thermal_zone*/temp’: No such file or directory
Does anyone know a workaround? Thanks for any help
Here’s mine:
- platform: command_line
name: CPU Temperature
command: "cat /sys/class/thermal/thermal_zone2/temp"
unit_of_measurement: "°F"
scan_interval: 240
value_template: " {{ (( value | multiply(0.0018)) + 32 ) | round (1) }}"
This is the mine, running on Proxmox (debian based). I assume that you might need to install the “sensors” app, on Ubuntu, through apt-get.
sensor:
- platform: ssh
host: !secret proxmox_host
name: 'NUC CPU Temp'
username: !secret proxmox_user
password: !secret proxmox_pass
command: "sensors | grep 'Package id 0:' | cut -c17-20"
value_template: >-
{%- set line = value.split("\r\n") -%}
{{ line[1] }}
unit_of_measurement: '°C'
2 Likes
Thanks guys, but I don’t have a Supervised install on the nuc. I’m not running Debian or Ubuntu. I’m running HassOS.
Running: cat /sys/class/thermal/thermal_zone*/temp
Doesn’t work, as described in my original message.
tom_l
May 24, 2020, 9:29am
6
So am I and the solution I posted above works for me.
Oh! @tom_l , in terminal/ssh what do get if you enter:
cat /sys/class/thermal/thermal_zone*/temp
I’ve also tried:
cat /sys/class/thermal/thermal_zone0/temp
cat /sys/class/thermal/thermal_zone1/temp
2, 3, 4
I always get:
cat: can’t open ‘/sys/class/thermal/thermal_zone*/temp’: No such file or directory
tom_l
May 24, 2020, 9:47am
8
The examples I posted above are from my system. I have zones 0, 1 and 2.
Mutt
(Muttley)
May 24, 2020, 12:00pm
9
So, presumably you have used the thermal_zone2 element and set your sensor as : -
- platform: command_line
name: CPU Temperature
command: "cat /sys/class/thermal/thermal_zone2/temp"
unit_of_measurement: "°C"
scan_interval: 240
value_template: '{{ value | multiply(0.001) | round(1) }}'
For Centigrade.
Or for Farenheit, follow Mark’s example above
It seems, from obesrvation (please correct me if I’m wrong, but the posts I’ve read seem to agree) that Pi’s use zone 0 and Intel’s use zone 2 ???
I’ve also noticed that : -
value_template: "{{ '%.1f' | format(value / 1000) }}"
Does NOT work at all, strange !
Maybe the filter to multipy() implicitly makes it a number
1 Like
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|_| |_|\___/|_| |_| |_|\___| /_/ \_\___/___/_|___/\__\__,_|_| |_|\__|
Welcome on Home Assistant command line.
For more details use 'help' and 'exit' to close.
If you need access to host system use 'login'.
ha > login
# cd /sys/class/thermal/
# ls
cooling_device0 cooling_device1 cooling_device2 cooling_device3
# cat /sys/class/thermal/cooling_device*/type
Processor
Processor
Processor
Processor
# cd /sys/class/thermal/cooling_device2/
# ls
cur_state device max_state power subsystem type uevent
#
I don’t have any “thermal_zone” in /sys/class/thermal/ only “cooling_device” and these don’t list a temperature.
123
(Taras)
May 24, 2020, 3:25pm
11
FWIW, this is a screenshot from my test system running Home Assistant 0.110.0 on an RPI3 (installed from disk-image; meaning it uses HassOS).
It contains just one thermal zone and no cooling zones.
Out of curiosity, is your RPI cooled passively or actively (i.e. does it have a fan)? My RPI3 is passively cooled (Flirc case).
Hey, it’s an Intel-nuc, not an RPI and it’s passively cooled.
This one: https://www.jetwaycomputer.com/JBC311U93.html
Issue is very similar to this thread: CPU Temperature for quad core CPU
123
(Taras)
May 24, 2020, 3:52pm
13
Perhaps that explains the differences between what you are seeing and what people are suggesting you use.
Thanks @123 , but @tom_l is using a nuc and it’s working for him. So don’t think that’s the problem. Maybe a BIOS setting? Or a hardware quirk?
123
(Taras)
May 24, 2020, 4:11pm
15
The link describes the product as “Intel NUC form factor ”. Is it truly a clone of an Intel NUC in all aspects? The fact you don’t see thermal_zone
, whereas other Intel NUC owners do, suggests there are subtle differences.
@123 I completely agree that there’s probably a difference. It’s strange that this previously worked when my install was Supervised on Ubuntu.
I am running HassOS in a VirtualBox VM on an Intel NUC running Windows 10 Pro and the sensors don’t exist. I only see cooling_zone0 and cooling_zone1 directories with no data files representing any kind of temperature. The NUC CPU is actively cooled. It has a fan.
Did anyone find the solution to this?
tom_l
May 25, 2020, 4:12pm
18
Open Hardware Monitor on the Windows HostPC:
I will take a look at that.
tom_l
May 25, 2020, 4:19pm
20
I just did a sneaky edit ofmy post because I wasn’t sure Glances could run on Windows. It can . Though OHW would probably be easier.
1 Like