Though it is called the LM78 driver, there is not too much LM78 specific
code in it; it can better be seen as an example code skeleton for other
drivers. Right now, it creats a file /proc/sensors-test, which contains
a list of busses it registered itself on. Stupid, but very useful for
testing purposes!
You need a 2.0 kernel for lm78.o to insert (or hack the /proc system
specific parts; see lm78.c of lm_sensors version 1 how to do this).
Other parts of lm_sensors-2 are not tested for 2.1 kernels either, but
I am certain it won't work in this case :-).
See the TODO list to get some idea what is left to do, choose something
and implement it. Or not :-). But please, send a note to the mailing
list when you start on something, to avoid duplicate work...
Other notable changes:
the smbus_access routines now use (the more logical) i2c_adapter
structure, instead of smbus_adapter.
git-svn-id: http://lm-sensors.org/svn/lm-sensors/trunk@13 7894878c-1315-0410-8ee3-d5d059ff63e0
* Modules now print their version number and date on insertion
* Some printk statements missed a \n
* 'make clean' now works, even if some .d (dependency) files contain garbage.
Note that *only* 'make clean' helps in that case; 'make clean all', for
example, will fail! There is really no nice way to solve that.
git-svn-id: http://lm-sensors.org/svn/lm-sensors/trunk@11 7894878c-1315-0410-8ee3-d5d059ff63e0
The real PIIX4 access code must still be written; perhaps somebody else could
do this? Most of it could be copied from the old piix4.c. But check carefully
what you are doing, as some things *have* changed (like the SMBUS_{BYTE,...}
variables!).
git-svn-id: http://lm-sensors.org/svn/lm-sensors/trunk@9 7894878c-1315-0410-8ee3-d5d059ff63e0