05-14-2009
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Padow
Not sure what HPUX runs on.
On the PA-RISC chip, which is based on the Motorola 88000 chip design.
HP ceased to produce PA-RISC chips (last series was the 9000) in end of 2008 and announced to switch over to Itanium.
Another formerly professional workstation now running on hobby electronics.
bakunin
9 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting
1. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users
Dear All Experts,
Would like to know the maturity/ stability of Redhat Linux AS 3.0 and Solaris.
My organization need to setup cluster solution. We are well-versed with Veritas Cluster on Solaris.
We are thinking of waiting for certification support of the various ISV like Oracle, Veritas... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: izy100
3 Replies
2. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users
I've loaded sol 10, and I left 20 Gig of 70 free, I can't seem to find a straight forward proc. for loading the Linux RH. Does anyone have one, or can they point me to one ? (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: jdel80
0 Replies
3. Linux
I have cdrom with the following files which I copieed on my hard drive.
RHEL4-U4-i386-ES-disc1.iso RHEL4-U4-i386-ES-disc4.iso
RHEL4-U4-i386-ES-disc2.iso RHEL4-U4-i386-ES-disc5.iso
RHEL4-U4-i386-ES-disc3.iso
What shell I do now to upgrade linux version. :o
Thank you
zam (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: zam
6 Replies
4. Linux
I'm aware of the linux-gate VDSO used to implement the sysenter mechanism for system calls. On older kernels this was mapped to a static location in the address space of each process. Newer kernels allow this to be dynamically located (though I don't think it's used by any distribution yet).
How... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: G_Morgan
0 Replies
5. What is on Your Mind?
By far, Doritos Nacho Cheesier are the best tasting chips, well at least too me.
Have you tried them?
What are your favorite chips? (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: Neo
5 Replies
6. Red Hat
Dear All,
I am running 32 bit RHEL5 in vmware platform ( windows XP ). Is there any free version of veritas volume manager available, if yes please provide the link.
Regards,
snjksh. (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: snjksh
1 Replies
7. What is on Your Mind?
I've been thinking about modern CPUs. Apart from x86 and SPARC, is there any other 'kind' of CPU used today in computers (not in playstation3, phones and similar) (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: orange47
6 Replies
8. SuSE
Hi
I don't know if this is good place for this post.
I`m using a laptop whit suse Linux 10.1 installed on it (since I bought it) and its only Importance is one industrial 3d scan software installed on it. its an old laptop whit an old version of Linux is it possible to backup this installed... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: mkhb75
1 Replies
9. OS X (Apple)
Hi guys and gals...
Intel reportedly expects Apple to start the Mac's transition to ARM next year - 9to5Mac (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: wisecracker
0 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
mrtg-sensors
MRTG-SENSORS(1) MRTG helper utilities MRTG-SENSORS(1)
NAME
mrtg-sensors - Returns data from lm-sensors
SYNOPSIS
mrtg-sensors [-m multiplier] chip label [chip label]
DESCRIPTION
mrtg-sensors uses the lm-sensors library to query various system sensors for information such as temperature, fan speed, etc. The output is
written in a form useful as input for the mrtg utility.
Up to two pairs of chips and labels may be specified. The first is used for the incoming data value in mrtg, while the second is used for
the outgoing data value. Of course, they need not correspond to incoming or outgoing data, that is merely what mrtg expects.
"chip" is the name of the chip to query, and "label" is the label of the piece of information that should be queried from the given chip.
sensors(1) can be used to look up all available chips and labels on your system.
Wildcards may be used in chip names, but only the first matching chip will be queried.
If you use the special name "dummy" as a chip name, nothing will be queried, and a value of zero will be sent to mrtg.
-m is the multiplier to be used in the output. The default multiplier is 1. Note that you may find it more useful to use sensors.conf(5) to
set global multipliers for sensors.
EXAMPLES
mrtg-sensors dummy dummy adm9240-* fan2
Get the speed of fan #2 from the adm9240 chip.
mrtg-sensors -m 0.5 adm9240-* fan1 adm9240-* fan2
Get the speeds of both fan #1 and fan #2, halfing both.
mrtg-sensors -m 2 dummy dummy adm9240-* temp
Get the cpu termerature, and double it.
SEE ALSO
sensors(1)
sensors.conf(5)
AUTHOR
mrtg-sensors was written by Joey 'no pseudo-code' Hess <joeyh@debian.org>.
mrtgutils 0.1 2001-03-04 MRTG-SENSORS(1)