hi,
we all know /proc is about the information of active process,
I have just read an artical which said you can use /proc/cpuinfo,
/proc/net./proc/meminfo etc. to know about some hardware
information .But I want to know how to use with command line? (1 Reply)
I did a search on this, but didn't find exactly the answer I'm looking for. What exactly is the proc directory for? Showing processes spawned by users? I ask because I have some very large files in that directory by multiple users and its affecting my disk usage. Can you limit how many... (2 Replies)
Hi,
What are the various way's to fix /proc folder in redhat linux 7.2 and how to verify /proc folder is proper or croupted?
Thank in advance
Bache Gowda (7 Replies)
:)
hi all !
Please help me
When I select data from oracle with proc * C prog.
I count the number of rows
For example the total rows is 1000000
but the number of result return is a limit number 5000 for ex
So How can I know this limit (5 Replies)
Perhaps this is a very dummy question but sorry I don't know other place to do it. We just buy a new cluster of Xeon machines but there is something I don't understand and perhaps someone can help me.
The more /proc/cpuinfo produces the following output (just part of it).
processor : 0... (1 Reply)
Hi,
I am trying to calculate the CPU Usage by getting the difference between the idle time reported by /proc/stat at 2 different intervals. Now the 4th entry in the first line of /proc/stat will give me the 'idle time'. But I also came across /proc/uptime that gives me 2 entries : 1st one as the... (0 Replies)
So, I'm looking over /proc/cpuinfo and have a question... I've read that "siblings" refers to hyperthreading, but that seems odd considering the contents of cpuinfo. Here's a part:
model name : Intel(R) Xeon(R) CPU E5410 @ 2.33GHz
physical id : 0
siblings : 4
core... (1 Reply)
If you are adding the kernel module without any module parameter passing, it should print out following information to info1 file so that user can make read access to info1 file (via, for example, cat /proc/info1):
• Processor type
• Kernel version
• Total number of the processes currently... (1 Reply)
Hi,
I wanted to understand what exactly /proc/cpuinfo shows?
We have a machine with following specification...
(2x) Intel Xeon 6-core processors
So, ideally it shouls have 12processors, but the output on /proc/cpuinfo shows 24 processors.
Can someone please explain how this is... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: shrshah64
3 Replies
LEARN ABOUT FREEBSD
linsysfs
LINSYSFS(5) BSD File Formats Manual LINSYSFS(5)NAME
linsysfs -- Linux system file system
SYNOPSIS
linsys /compat/linux/sys linsysfs rw 0 0
DESCRIPTION
The Linux system file system, or linsysfs, emulates a subset of the Linux sys file system and is required for the complete operation of some
Linux binaries.
The linsysfs provides a two-level view of devices. At the highest level, PCI devices themselves are named, according to their bus, slot and
function in the system hierarchy. PCI storage devices are listed in the scsi_host class with a device symlink to the PCI directories of the
devices.
Each device node is a directory containing some files and directories:
host A place holder for storage host information.
pci_id A directory for the pci_id that contains either the device information or another directory structure for a PCI bridge.
Each host node of scsi_host is a directory containing some files and directories:
proc_name The Linux registered driver name for these devices.
device A symlink to the PCI device directory.
FILES
/compat/linux/sys The normal mount point for linsysfs.
/compat/linux/sys/class/scsi_host The storage host node.
/compat/linux/sys/devices/pci0000:00 The PCI device hierarchy node.
EXAMPLES
The most common usage follows:
mount -t linsysfs linsys /compat/linux/sys
where /compat/linux/sys is a mount point.
SEE ALSO nmount(2), unmount(2), linprocfs(5), pseudofs(9)HISTORY
The linsysfs driver first appeared in FreeBSD 6.2.
AUTHORS
The linsysfs driver was derived from linprocfs by Doug Ambrisko. This manual page was edited by Doug Ambrisko, based on the linprocfs(5)
manual page by Garrett Wollman.
BSD February 5, 2007 BSD