On Thu, Sep 27, 2007 at 06:54:28PM +0200, Carl-Daniel Hailfinger wrote:
Well, as I said, I tested superiotool on multiple machines. I should be able to just crack the case on a machine and spot it on the motherboard, I assume?
Yes, but we'll probably be able to tell it from the short output without opening any machine.
Looking at the actual chip would still be useful sometimes, for instance to spot datasheet ID/rev errors (e.g. when the chip says it's a different chip than what the IDs tell you).
As for datasheets:
http://www.ite.com.tw/product_info/PC/pc_product_info_2.asp http://www.winbond.com/hq/enu/ProductAndSales/ProductLines/ComputerLogicIC/ http://www.winbond.com/hq/enu/ProductAndSales/ProductReference/EOLProducts/ http://www.smsc.com/main/datasheet.html ftp://ftp.smsc.com/pub/datasheets/ ftp://ftp.smsc.com/pub/discontinued/ http://www.fintek.com.tw/eng/products.asp?BID=1&SID=17&layer=0
Probably lots more which I missed right now (just google for the Super I/O name, that should find you datasheets for almost all of them). Hm, maybe we should add a "Datasheets" wiki page with links?
Uwe.