CLI Magic: Viewing system information


 
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Old 01-08-2008
CLI Magic: Viewing system information

Tue, 08 Jan 2008 09:00:00 GMT
GNU/Linux is bursting with information about the system on which it runs. The system's hardware and memory, its Internet link and current processes, the latest activity of each user -- all this information and more is available. And, despite such desktop tools as the KDE Control Center or GNOME's System Monitor, the easiest place to get all the system information available is still the command line.


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gnutls-cli-debug(1)					      General Commands Manual					       gnutls-cli-debug(1)

NAME
gnutls-cli-debug - GnuTLS test client, with verbose output SYNOPSIS
gnutls-cli-debug [options] hostname DESCRIPTION
Simple client program to set up a TLS connection to some other computer. Like gnutls-cli(1), it sets up a TLS connection and forwards data from the standard input to the socket. Any information about the TLS control connection is printed to standard error. OPTIONS
-d, --debug integer Enable debugging. -p, --port integer The port to connect to. -h, --help Prints a short reminder of the command line options. -v, --verbose Even more verbose output. SEE ALSO
gnutls-cli(1), gnutls-serv(1) AUTHOR
Nikos Mavroyanopoulos <nmav@gnutls.org> and others; see /usr/share/doc/gnutls-bin/AUTHORS for a complete list. This manual page was written by Ivo Timmermans <ivo@debian.org>, for the Debian GNU/Linux system (but may be used by others). December 1st 2003 gnutls-cli-debug(1)