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BIOS
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=== Hardware monitoring === {{Main|Hardware monitoring}} A modern BIOS setup screen often features a '''PC Health Status''' or a '''Hardware Monitoring''' tab, which directly interfaces with a Hardware Monitor chip of the mainboard.<ref name=sensors-mmath>{{cite thesis |degree= [[Master of Mathematics#Canada|MMath]] |author= Constantine A. Murenin |date= 2010-05-21 |section = 11.1. Interfacing from the BIOS |title= OpenBSD Hardware Sensors β Environmental Monitoring and Fan Control. |location= [[University of Waterloo]] |publisher= UWSpace |url = http://cnst.su/MMathCS |hdl = 10012/5234 |id = Document ID: ab71498b6b1a60ff817b29d56997a418. }}</ref> This makes it possible to monitor CPU and [[computer case|chassis]] temperature, the voltage provided by the [[power supply unit (computer)|power supply unit]], as well as monitor and [[computer fan control|control the speed of the fans]] connected to the motherboard. Once the system is booted, hardware monitoring and [[computer fan control]] is normally done directly by the Hardware Monitor chip itself, which can be a separate chip, interfaced through [[IΒ²C]] or [[System Management Bus|SMBus]], or come as a part of a [[Super I/O]] solution, interfaced through [[Industry Standard Architecture]] (ISA) or [[Low Pin Count]] (LPC).<ref name=ieee07>{{Cite conference |author= Constantine A. Murenin |date= 2007-04-17 |url = http://sensors.cnst.su/IEEE_ICNSC_2007 |section = 2. Hardware review |title= Generalised Interfacing with Microprocessor System Hardware Monitors |conference= Proceedings of 2007 IEEE International Conference on Networking, Sensing and Control, 15β17 April 2007. |location= London, United Kingdom |publisher=[[Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers|IEEE]] |pages = 901β906 |doi = 10.1109/ICNSC.2007.372901 |isbn = 978-1-4244-1076-7 |id = IEEE ICNSC 2007, pp. 901β906. }}</ref> Some operating systems, like [[NetBSD]] with [[envsys]] and [[OpenBSD]] with sysctl [[hw.sensors]], feature integrated interfacing with hardware monitors. However, in some circumstances, the BIOS also provides the underlying information about hardware monitoring through [[Advanced Configuration and Power Interface|ACPI]], in which case, the operating system may be using ACPI to perform hardware monitoring.<ref name=aibs.4>{{cite web|url=http://mdoc.su/-/aibs.4|title=aibs β ASUSTeK AI Booster ACPI ATK0110 voltage, temperature and fan sensor|publisher=[[OpenBSD]], [[DragonFly BSD]], [[NetBSD]] and [[FreeBSD]]|date=2010}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|title=acpi_thermal(4)|url=https://www.freebsd.org/cgi/man.cgi?query=acpi_thermal&sektion=4|access-date=2021-02-24|website=www.freebsd.org}}</ref>
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