02-27-2008
Can you explain to me?
Please
5 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting
1. What is on Your Mind?
Okay, I don't know how this is funny, but it is. I found this while searching for Linux (please don't ask). :o (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: gnerd
0 Replies
2. Shell Programming and Scripting
Still working on manipulating SQL statements. Some are very long (10-20k). I'm using a shell script to read the SQL statements that are stored in a DB2 table and writing the records out to a file on Unix. The records appear to be getting truncated at 8k.
Is there any way for me to avoid the... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: bradtri2
1 Replies
3. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hi one to All
i have written the code for searching the string in the file for specified path. its working fine,
but my req:if the string is not available in the file , it should display the Message saying that , string is not available in the file.
code is:
echo "give the path where... (12 Replies)
Discussion started by: saic
12 Replies
4. Solaris
Hi folk,
I have this hardware faunty message, but dont know which hardware is this ? can you guide me ?
--------------- ------------------------------------ -------------- ---------
TIME EVENT-ID MSG-ID SEVERITY
---------------... (9 Replies)
Discussion started by: dehetoxic
9 Replies
5. Hardware
I wasn't sure where to post this. Please move this as is fitting.
My 10yr old laptop's (Dell, Latitude E5530, 4G ram, 2.5Ghz x 2 CPU) spin drive has died (currently running TinyCore Linux on USB in ram).
I would be running Linux, compiling the kernel, and programming in C++. I do not do... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: bedtime
0 Replies
LSDEV(8) Linux System Manual LSDEV(8)
NAME
lsdev - display information about installed hardware
SYNOPSIS
lsdev
DESCRIPTION
lsdev gathers information about your computer's installed hardware from the interrupts, ioports and dma files in the /proc directory, thus
giving you a quick overview of which hardware uses what I/O addresses and what IRQ and DMA channels.
OPTIONS
None.
FILES
/proc/interrupts
IRQ channels.
/proc/ioports
I/O memory addresses.
/proc/dma
DMA channels.
BUGS
lsdev can't always figure out which lines in the three examined files refer to one and the same device, because these files sometimes use
different names for the same piece of hardware. For example, in some kernels the keyboard is referred to as `kbd' in /proc/ioports and as
`keyboard' in /proc/interrupts. This should be fixed in the kernel, not in lsdev (as has indeed happened for this particular example).
The program does however try to match lines by stripping anything after a space or open parenthesis from the name, so that e.g. the
`serial' lines from /proc/interrupts match the `serial(set)' lines from /proc/ioports. This attempt at DWIM might be considered a bug in
itself.
This program only shows the kernel's idea of what hardware is present, not what's actually physically available.
SEE ALSO
procinfo(8).
AUTHOR
Sander van Malssen <svm@kozmix.cistron.nl>
3rd Release 1998-05-31 LSDEV(8)