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Full Discussion: CPU Count
Operating Systems Linux Red Hat CPU Count Post 302595207 by Duffs22 on Thursday 2nd of February 2012 11:03:09 AM
Old 02-02-2012
Yip, simply looking for the number of cores which according to this is 8. Thing is though it does not correspond to what the hardware mgmt interface sayes?

# hpasmcli
HP management CLI for Linux (v2.0)
Copyright 2008 Hewlett-Packard Development Group, L.P.
hpasmcli> show server
System : ProLiant BL460c G6
Serial No. : GB8033X7FV
ROM version : I24 03/30/2010
iLo present : Yes
Embedded NICs : 2
NIC1 MAC: 78:e7:d1:65:3a:60
NIC2 MAC: 78:e7:d1:65:3a:64
Processor: 0
Name : Intel Xeon
Stepping : 5
Speed : 2933 MHz
Bus : 133 MHz
Core : 4
Thread : 8
Socket : 1
Level2 Cache : 1024 KBytes
Status : Ok
Processor total : 1

R,
D
 

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SETETHER(8)						      System Manager's Manual						       SETETHER(8)

NAME
setether - Set the ethernet address for use with DECnet SYNOPSIS
setether <if> [<if>...]|all [options] DESCRIPTION
Set ethernet MAC address on ethernet adaptors This script should be run at system startup. It will change the ethernet hardware (MAC) address of any or all ethernet interfaces to match the DECnet node address. DECnet requires that the MAC address of all ethernet adaptors running the protocol be set approriately. If you do not run setether then you must change the ethernet address in some other way for DECnet to work. By default no ethernet interfaces will have their MAC addresses changed by setether, if you specify all then all interfaces name eth* will be changed, otherwise a list of interface names can be specified. setether will enable (UP) all interfaces it changes the MAC addresses of. (2.4 only) The first interface specified on the command-line will also be made the default interface for DECnet operations (ie attempts to contact nodes not in the neighbour table will be done over this interface). This script must be run with the interface inactive, it is normally run from /etc/init.d/decnet before TCP/IP starts up. EXAMPLES
set the MAC address of eth0. # /sbin/setether eth0 set the MAC address of all ethernet interfaces # /sbin/setether all HELPFUL HINTS
If you have multiple ethernet cards on your system and they are connected to the the same network you should specify which one you want to use for DECnet communication on the setether command line, otherwise they will both be given the same MAC address and this is probably not what you want. Running DECnet on multiple ethernet interfaces only works under Linux 2.4. If you are running Linux 2.2 then the interface name on the setether command line must match the one in /etc/decnet.conf(5). SEE ALSO
decnet.conf(5), dntype(1), dndir(1), dndel(1), dnetd(8), dnping(1) DECnet utilities March 01 2001 SETETHER(8)
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