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Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting Vm versus physical linux server Post 302821413 by bigbenn on Friday 14th of June 2013 01:24:09 PM
Old 06-14-2013
Vm versus physical linux server

Does anyone have a script that can be run to tell you if you are on either a VM Linux or a physical Linux server?

Last edited by joeyg; 06-14-2013 at 03:19 PM.. Reason: Clarified Title
 

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PVDISPLAY(8)						      System Manager's Manual						      PVDISPLAY(8)

NAME
pvdisplay - display attributes of a physical volume SYNOPSIS
pvdisplay [-c|--colon] [-d|--debug] [-h|-?|--help] [-s|--short] [-v[v]|--verbose [--verbose]] PhysicalVolumePath [PhysicalVolumePath...] DESCRIPTION
pvdisplay allows you to see the attributes of one or more physical volumes like size, physical extent size, space used for the volume group descriptor area and so on. pvs (8) is an alternative that provides the same information in the style of ps (1). OPTIONS
See lvm for common options. -c, --colon Generate colon separated output for easier parsing in scripts or programs. N.B. pvs (8) provides considerably more control over the output. The values are: * physical volume device name * volume group name * physical volume size in kilobytes * internal physical volume number (obsolete) * physical volume status * physical volume (not) allocatable * current number of logical volumes on this physical volume * physical extent size in kilobytes * total number of physical extents * free number of physical extents * allocated number of physical extents -s, --short Only display the size of the given physical volumes. -m, --maps Display the mapping of physical extents to logical volumes and logical extents. SEE ALSO
lvm(8), pvcreate(8), lvcreate(8), vgcreate(8) Sistina Software UK LVM TOOLS 2.02.44-cvs (02-17-09) PVDISPLAY(8)
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