06-21-2007
On linux, you can try 'dmidecode' (kernel-utils package on RH-based Linux), this shows a lot of information such Bios version, System information, S/N, etc.
Be careful to run this command on production environments, it can be buggy on some systems (it usually crashes some Dell servers).
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LEARN ABOUT SUSE
fsck.cramfs
FSCK.CRAMFS(8) System Administration FSCK.CRAMFS(8)
NAME
fsck.cramfs - fsck compressed ROM file system
SYNOPSIS
fsck.cramfs [options] file
DESCRIPTION
fsck.cramfs is used to check the cramfs file system.
OPTIONS
-v, --verbose
Enable verbose messaging.
-b, --blocksize blocksize
Use this blocksize, defaults to page size. Must be equal to what was set at creation time. Only used for --extract.
--extract[=directory]
Test to uncompress the whole file system. Optionally extract contents of the file to directory.
-a This option is silently ignored.
-y This option is silently ignored.
-V, --version
Display version information and exit.
-h, --help
Display help text and exit.
EXIT STATUS
0 success
4 file system was left uncorrected
8 operation error, such as unable to allocate memory
16 usage information was printed
SEE ALSO
mount(8), mkfs.cramfs(8)
AVAILABILITY
The example command is part of the util-linux package and is available from Linux Kernel Archive <https://www.kernel.org/pub/linux/utils
/util-linux/>.
util-linux April 2013 FSCK.CRAMFS(8)