Op een druilerige winterdag (Wednesday 07 January 2004 11:19), schreef Alan Burlison:
> Abe Timmerman wrote: > > comments and suggestions also welcome. > > On Solaris/Sparc you should use 'prtdiag' or 'prtdiag -v' as it gives more > info on CPU implementation, cache & memory sizes etc. On x86 you can get > some more info from 'kstat -p cpu_info' (a perl script BTW), although this > is only available from Solaris 8 onwards. See also the 'psrinfo -v' > output. Okay thanks, I missed prtdiag it looks like the right tool. Now my question is what would you like reported for 'cpu_type' (a short description like i686 or x86 for Intel)? from psrinfo I get: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [solaris2.9] (Wed Jan 7 14:02:18) ~$ psrinfo -v Status of processor 0 as of: 01/07/2004 14:05:18 Processor has been on-line since 12/23/2003 17:31:51. The sparcv9 processor operates at 502 MHz, and has a sparcv9 floating point processor. That looks like 'sparcv9' is a candidate ~$ prtdiag System Configuration: Sun Microsystems sun4u Sun Blade 100 (UltraSPARC-IIe) System clock frequency: 84 MHZ Memory size: 896MB ==================================== CPUs ==================================== E$ CPU CPU Temperature CPU Freq Size Implementation Mask Die Amb. Location --- -------- ---------- ------------------- ----- ---- ---- -------- 0 502 MHz 256KB SUNW,UltraSPARC-IIe 1.4 78C 34C +-board/cpu0 That looks like 'UtltraSPARC-IIe' is a candidate and the currently used 'sun4u?' The full cpu info will be what is on the 'System Configuration:' line with the cpu frequency added: (jet) Sun Microsystems sun4u Sun Blade 100 (UltraSPARC-IIe) (502MHz) Good luck, Abe -- Nicholas Clark> [please, someone answer me. It's getting silly making my Nicholas Clark> own thread] Welcome to my world :-) -- Jarkko Hietaniemi on p5p @ 2001-11-24