How can I get the CPU temperature?

C#.NetWmi

C# Problem Overview


I need to gather some system information for the application I'm developing. The memory available and the CPU load are easy to get using C#. Unfortunately, the CPU temperature it's not that easy. I have tried using WMI, but I couldn't get anything using

Win32_TemperatureProbe

or

MSAcpi_ThermalZoneTemperature

How can I do this? I'm wondering how monitoring programs, as SiSoftware Sandra, can get that information...

Here is the code of the class:

public class SystemInformation
{
    private System.Diagnostics.PerformanceCounter m_memoryCounter;
    private System.Diagnostics.PerformanceCounter m_CPUCounter;

    public SystemInformation()
    {
        m_memoryCounter = new System.Diagnostics.PerformanceCounter();
        m_memoryCounter.CategoryName = "Memory";
        m_memoryCounter.CounterName = "Available MBytes";

        m_CPUCounter = new System.Diagnostics.PerformanceCounter();
        m_CPUCounter.CategoryName = "Processor";
        m_CPUCounter.CounterName = "% Processor Time";
        m_CPUCounter.InstanceName = "_Total";
    }

    public float GetAvailableMemory()
    {
        return m_memoryCounter.NextValue();
    }

    public float GetCPULoad()
    {
        return m_CPUCounter.NextValue();
    }

    public float GetCPUTemperature()
    {
        //...
        return 0;
    }
}

C# Solutions


Solution 1 - C#

> For others who may come by here, maybe take a look at : http://openhardwaremonitor.org/

Follow that link and at first you might think, "Hey, that's an application, and that is why it was removed. The question was how to do this from C# code, not to find an application that can tell me the temperature..." This is where it shows you are not willing to invest enough time in reading what "Open Hardware Monitor" also is.

They also include a data interface. Here is the description:

> Data Interface > The Open Hardware Monitor publishes all sensor data to > WMI (Windows Management Instrumentation). This allows other > applications to read and use the sensor information as well. A > preliminary documentation of the interface can be found here (click).

When you download it, it contains the OpenHardwareMonitor.exe application, and you're not looking for that one. It also contains the OpenHardwareMonitorLib.dll, and you're looking for that one.

It is mostly, if not 100%, just a wrapper around the WinRing0 API, which you could choose to wrap yourself if you feel like it.

I have tried this out from a C# application myself, and it works. Although it was still in beta, it seemed rather stable. It is also open source, so it could be a good starting point instead.

Solution 2 - C#

You can indeed read the CPU temperature very easily in C# by using a WMI approach.

To get the temperature in Celsius, I have created a wrapper that converts the value returned by WMI and wraps it into an easy-to-use object.

Please remember to add a reference to the System.Management.dll in Visual Studio.

using System;
using System.Collections.Generic;
using System.Linq;
using System.Text;
using System.Management;

namespace RCoding.Common.Diagnostics.SystemInfo
{
    public class Temperature
    {
        public double CurrentValue { get; set; }
        public string InstanceName { get; set; }
        public static List<Temperature> Temperatures
        {
            get
            {
                List<Temperature> result = new List<Temperature>();
                ManagementObjectSearcher searcher = new ManagementObjectSearcher(@"root\WMI", "SELECT * FROM MSAcpi_ThermalZoneTemperature");
                foreach (ManagementObject obj in searcher.Get())
                {
                    Double temperature = Convert.ToDouble(obj["CurrentTemperature"].ToString());
                    temperature = (temperature - 2732) / 10.0;
                    result.Add(new Temperature { CurrentValue = temperature, InstanceName = obj["InstanceName"].ToString() });
                }
                return result;
            }
        }
    }
}

Solution 3 - C#

I'm pretty sure it's manufacturer dependent, since they will be accessed through an I/O port. If you have a specific board you're trying to work with, try looking through the manuals and/or contacting the manufacturer.

If you want to do this for a lot of different boards, I'd recommend contacting someone at something like SiSoftware or be prepared to read a lot of motherboard manuals.

As another note, not all boards have temperature monitors.

You also might run into problems getting privileged access from the kernel.

Solution 4 - C#

You can give the Open Hardware Monitor a go, although it lacks support for the latest processors.

internal sealed class CpuTemperatureReader : IDisposable
{
    private readonly Computer _computer;

    public CpuTemperatureReader()
    {
        _computer = new Computer { CPUEnabled = true };
        _computer.Open();
    }

    public IReadOnlyDictionary<string, float> GetTemperaturesInCelsius()
    {
        var coreAndTemperature = new Dictionary<string, float>();

        foreach (var hardware in _computer.Hardware)
        {
            hardware.Update(); //use hardware.Name to get CPU model
            foreach (var sensor in hardware.Sensors)
            {
                if (sensor.SensorType == SensorType.Temperature && sensor.Value.HasValue)
                    coreAndTemperature.Add(sensor.Name, sensor.Value.Value);
            }
        }

        return coreAndTemperature;
    }

    public void Dispose()
    {
        try
        {
            _computer.Close();
        }
        catch (Exception)
        {
            //ignore closing errors
        }
    }
}

Download the ZIP file from the official source, extract and add a reference to file OpenHardwareMonitorLib.dll in your project.

Solution 5 - C#

I extracted the CPU part from Open Hardware Monitor into a separate library, exposing sensors and members normally hidden into OHM.

It also includes many updates (like the support for Ryzen and Xeon) because on Open Hardware Monitor (OHM) they haven't accepted pull requests since 2015.

https://www.nuget.org/packages/HardwareProviders.CPU.Standard/

Solution 6 - C#

It's depends on if your computer supports WMI. My computer can't run this WMI demo either.

But I successfully get the CPU temperature via Open Hardware Monitor. Add the Openhardwaremonitor reference in Visual Studio. It's easier. Try this:

using System;
using System.Collections.Generic;
using System.Linq;
using System.Text;
using System.Threading.Tasks;
using OpenHardwareMonitor.Hardware;

namespace Get_CPU_Temp5
{
   class Program
   {
       public class UpdateVisitor : IVisitor
       {
           public void VisitComputer(IComputer computer)
           {
               computer.Traverse(this);
           }

           public void VisitHardware(IHardware hardware)
           {
               hardware.Update();
               foreach (IHardware subHardware in hardware.SubHardware) subHardware.Accept(this);
           }

           public void VisitSensor(ISensor sensor) { }
           public void VisitParameter(IParameter parameter) { }
       }

       static void GetSystemInfo()
       {
           UpdateVisitor updateVisitor = new UpdateVisitor();
           Computer computer = new Computer();
           computer.Open();
           computer.CPUEnabled = true;
           computer.Accept(updateVisitor);
           for (int i = 0; i < computer.Hardware.Length; i++)
           {
               if (computer.Hardware[i].HardwareType == HardwareType.CPU)
               {
                   for (int j = 0; j < computer.Hardware[i].Sensors.Length; j++)
                   {
                       if (computer.Hardware[i].Sensors[j].SensorType == SensorType.Temperature)
                               Console.WriteLine(computer.Hardware[i].Sensors[j].Name + ":" + computer.Hardware[i].Sensors[j].Value.ToString() + "\r");
                   }
               }
           }
           computer.Close();
       }

       static void Main(string[] args)
       {
           while (true)
           {
               GetSystemInfo();
           }
       }
   }
}

You need to run this demo as an administrator.

You can see the tutorial in Using Open Hardware Monitor to get CPU temperature in C# and make a fan cooling system.

Solution 7 - C#

It can be done in your code via WMI. I've found a tool (WMI Code Creator v1.0) from Microsoft that creates code for it.

> The WMI Code Creator tool allows you to generate VBScript, C#, and VB > .NET code that uses WMI to complete a management task such as querying > for management data, executing a method from a WMI class, or receiving > event notifications using WMI.

Solution 8 - C#

The mentioned WMI classes were not working for me in the latest version of Windows 10.

On my Dell laptop I could get the CPU temperature in Celsius like this via PowerShell:

$data = Get-WMIObject -Query "SELECT * FROM Win32_PerfFormattedData_Counters_ThermalZoneInformation" -Namespace "root/CIMV2"
@($data)[0].HighPrecisionTemperature

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Solution 1 - C#JensView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 2 - C#Lasse RaschView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 3 - C#samozView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 4 - C#Ali ZahidView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 5 - C#TheQultView Answer on Stackoverflow
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