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Operating Systems Solaris How to get the Solaris system information? Post 302454213 by cjcox on Friday 17th of September 2010 11:27:16 AM
Old 09-17-2010
Quote:
Originally Posted by forumguest
...snip...
From the above outputs , i could find only CPU speed, CPU Implementation and CPU status. But i also need
CPU family and CPU Model,CPU Stepping, and CPU cache memory.

Is any there command is used for getting the above mentioned details ?

Please guide me.
This is Solaris... so NO... there's no way to extract such data reliably. The concepts of "family", "model" (the numeric x86 style value) and "stepping" do not apply to all processor types. There is no reliable way to get the cache information, and besides as processors now come with L1, L2 AND now L3 cache... which cache is interesting? Typically, other systems focus on L2 cache (I guess never believing that there would ever be L3).

You HAVE been guided, you've given enough info to get you started... but you're asking for things that either are n/a to Solaris/SPARC or just simply cannot be retrieved easily.

If you want that kind of CPU data on Solaris Intel, new Solaris revisions will contain the smbios command which is like the dmidecode utility under Linux and you should be able to get most of what you are wanting CPU wise from that.... but it's not going to work on SPARC platforms. Also, I'll just point out that Solaris smbios command is NOT nearly as good as dmidecode... so you might just want to build and compile dmidecode and run it on your Intel Solaris boxes... THEN you will get everything, including Family, Model, Stepping. Dmidecode will show you L1, L2 and L3 cache data as well... and it does compile quite well on Solaris Intel.... not sure why they went with their own smbios tool (??) it's a very poor replacement. And you won't find smbios except on the NEWEST Solaris... not even sure if it's any Solaris 10.
 

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scsi_sync_pkt(9F)					   Kernel Functions for Drivers 					 scsi_sync_pkt(9F)

NAME
scsi_sync_pkt - synchronize CPU and I/O views of memory SYNOPSIS
#include <sys/scsi/scsi.h> void scsi_sync_pkt(struct scsi_pkt *pktp); INTERFACE LEVEL
Solaris DDI specific (Solaris DDI). PARAMETERS
pktp Pointer to a scsi_pkt(9S) structure. DESCRIPTION
scsi_sync_pkt() is used to selectively synchronize a CPU's or device's view of the data associated with the SCSI packet that has been mapped for I/O. This may involve operations such as flushes of CPU or I/O caches, as well as other more complex operations such as stalling until hardware write buffers have drained. This function need only be called under certain circumstances. When a SCSI packet is mapped for I/O using scsi_init_pkt(9F) and destroyed using scsi_destroy_pkt(9F), then an implicit scsi_sync_pkt() will be performed. However, if the memory object has been modified by either the device or a CPU after the mapping by scsi_init_pkt(9F), then a call to scsi_sync_pkt() is required. If the same scsi_pkt is reused for a data transfer from memory to a device, then scsi_sync_pkt() must be called before calling scsi_trans- port(9F). If the same packet is reused for a data transfer from a device to memory scsi_sync_pkt() must be called after the completion of the packet but before accessing the data in memory. CONTEXT
scsi_sync_pkt() may be called from user or interrupt context. SEE ALSO
tran_sync_pkt(9E), ddi_dma_sync(9F), scsi_destroy_pkt(9F), scsi_init_pkt(9F), scsi_transport(9F), scsi_pkt(9S) Writing Device Drivers SunOS 5.10 25 Feb 1994 scsi_sync_pkt(9F)
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