On Sun, 27 Sep 2009, Hans Witvliet wrote:
On Sat, 2009-09-26 at 22:06 -0400, Robert P. J. Day wrote:
suggestions for command-line tools to examine the HW on a system? so far, i've got:
* "hwinfo" * "lspci" * "lsusb" * perusing under /proc * perusing under /sys
any others that would fit on that list? (i come from a fedora background so i'm not yet familiar with the suse-specific tools). thanks.
# lsscsi [0:0:2:0] disk COMPAQ BD14688278 HPB2 /dev/sda [0:0:3:0] disk COMPAQ BD14688278 HPB2 /dev/sdb [0:0:4:0] disk COMPAQ BD14689BB9 HPB1 /dev/sdc [0:0:5:0] disk COMPAQ BD14687B52 HPB8 /dev/sdd [0:0:8:0] disk COMPAQ BD14687B52 HPB8 /dev/sde [0:0:9:0] disk COMPAQ BD14689BB9 HPB1 /dev/sdf [0:0:11:0] disk COMPAQ BF3008B26C HPB9 /dev/sdg [0:0:12:0] disk COMPAQ BF3008B26C HPB9 /dev/sdh [0:0:13:0] disk COMPAQ BD30089BBA HPB1 /dev/sdi [0:0:14:0] disk COMPAQ BF3008B26C HPB9 /dev/sdj [0:0:15:0] disk COMPAQ BF3008B26C HPB9 /dev/sdk [2:0:0:0] disk WD 10EAVS External 1.05 /dev/sdl
ah, that's nice, i'd never seen that command before, thanks. and i see there a number of other "ls"-prefixed commands: lscpu, lsdev, and a bunch of others: # ls<TAB> i'm guessing some of those are simply repackaging of /proc content, just as "lsmod" is a repackaging of the contents of /proc/modules. rday -- ======================================================================== Robert P. J. Day Waterloo, Ontario, CANADA Linux Consulting, Training and Annoying Kernel Pedantry. Web page: http://crashcourse.ca Twitter: http://twitter.com/rpjday ======================================================================== -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org For additional commands, e-mail: opensuse+help@opensuse.org