On Sunday 2008-04-06 12:06, pelibali wrote:
I have several computers, mainly older SUSE 9.x and 10.x releases to administer and I simply forgot when any of these systems has been installed. On a Hungarian list I received a reply to do 'ls -ld /' to see the age of the file-system (installation date if fresh install), others suggested to go for 'ls -l /etc/SuSE-release', but none of these really works and gives me that particular date.
Since I did not use the yast package AT ALL except on initial install (must have been 8.2), I know the result: 12:59 yaguchi:/var/lib/YaST2 > l -rt total 48 drwxr-xr-x 3 root root 4096 Dec 17 22:12 . drwx--x--x 2 root root 21 Dec 17 22:12 backup_boot_sectors drwxr-xr-x 46 root root 4096 Mar 26 20:15 .. -rw-r--r-- 1 root root 393 Jun 1 2003 install.inf comes pretty close. The current box, I bought in April 2003 or so..
Further idea would be to ship this date from the rpm database via 'rpm -qa --last | tail', which in fact works and looks OK on a single machine, but I'm not sure if the date would be still OK, if in the meantime the very first rpms would have been removed/updated/etc.
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