On Sun, 21 Jan 2001, Ronald G Minnich wrote:

> [rminnich@beckerwulf rminnich]$ bpsh -n 2 lspci


I should explain this command. bpsh is a command you use in a scyld
cluster (http://www.scyld.com).

We have 16 nodes booting linuxbios, linux, and then scyld software out of
flash. These are MS7308E nodes. So the bpsh -n 2 means
"run the following command on node 2 of the cluster".

The command was lspci. There is very little on the cluster, so you get -n
format on the lspci whether you want it or not:

> 00:00.0 Class 0600: 1039:0630 (rev 20)
> 00:00.1 Class 0101: 1039:5513 (rev d0)
> 00:01.0 Class 0601: 1039:0008
> 00:01.1 Class 0200: 1039:0900 (rev 81)
> 00:01.2 Class 0c03: 1039:7001 (rev 07)
> 00:01.3 Class 0c03: 1039:7001 (rev 07)
> 00:01.4 Class 0401: 1039:7018 (rev 02)
> 00:01.6 Class 0703: 1039:7013 (rev a0)
> 00:02.0 Class 0604: 1039:0001
> 01:00.0 Class 0300: 1039:6300 (rev 20)

So we got the pci list, and it's pretty much what you see on the winfast.
Now we try to lspci -xxx the northbridge, and I guess due to 2.2.17
problems, we can't:
> [rminnich@beckerwulf rminnich]$ bpsh -n 2 lspci -xxx -s 0:0.0
> pcilib: proc_read: tried to read 256 bytes at 0, but got only 64
> lspci: Unable to read 256 bytes of configuration space.



oh well.

ron

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