General :: Which Command To Use To Find Out System Configuration
Apr 10, 2010which command to use to find out system configuration
View 5 Replieswhich command to use to find out system configuration
View 5 RepliesCan anyone tell me the command to find Dell system motherboard BIOS for a linux machine ?
i tried find dmidecode but that does not fetch me appropriate output.
How can i find through terminal that which devices are external and which are internal.
By external i mean devices attached to USB port. For Example, USB Drive, Portable USB HardDrive etc.
By internal i mean devices attached internally. For Example, SATA Harddisk etc.
I have searched many forums but did not find a way to FIND A CORE FILE WITH OUT USING FIND COMMAND.
View 11 Replies View RelatedIs there any way to find the core files with out using the FIND command?
View 1 Replies View RelatedOnce in a while I stumble on this (after I install something which probably conflicts). I was able with the sticky notes to correct the problem few times but this time is a bit more complicated at least for me.What is strange is that I cannot find the ALSA-Configuration.txt in my system.
View 9 Replies View RelatedIs there any command to find system make and model in linux like how solaris shows "Netra X4200" when we give command "uname -a"
View 1 Replies View RelatedI want to see what is the configuration of my Wind River Linux (actually I want to see what modules are installed in it when it was built). I can't find the configuration file.
View 14 Replies View RelatedI have 4 Linux machines with cluster.My target is to find all kind of IP address (xxx.xxx.xxx.xxx) in every file in the linux system remark: need to scan each file in the linux system and verify if the file include IP address if yes need to print the IP as the following
more /etc/inet/file.example1
182.23.2.4
255.255.0.0
10.10.1.1
I have a computer with internet access with amd64 architecture running Debian stable (Lenny). I have another computer with NO internet access with i386 architecture running Debian stable (Lenny).I want to download some packages for the i386 computer using the amd64 computer. So far, the only way I can see to do this is to use dpkg-architecture to temporarily change to i386 on the internet computer, run aptitude with the download-only option to retrieve the packages I need with all suitable dependencies, then switch the internet computer back over to amd64.
I can't imagine I'm the only person who ever needed to do this, and yet I've had no luck finding any advice. The method I described seems rather awkward - is there a more elegant solution?
I apologize to the membership, I realize now the absurdity of this subject. Having now studied the online repository search functions closer, I see it appears packages are automatically retrieved with all necessary dependencies. As such, it is not necessary to use apt and its various functions to do the job.
I am trying to do a find/grep/wc command to find matching files, print the filename and then the word count of a specific pattern per file. Here is my best (non-working) attempt so far:
wc `find . ( -name "*.as" -o -name "*.mxml" ) -exec grep -H HeightResizableList {}` ;
Is there a way to specify to find that I only want text files (and not binary files)? Grep has an option to exclude binary files, so I thought find probably has a similar feature, but I've been unable to find it.
View 2 Replies View RelatedI know how to search for normal files but can you let me know " How to search for 5 setuid files on the system. Also explain, for each file, why setuid mechanism is necessary for the command to function properly"
View 1 Replies View Relatedam new to linux and trying to find a file in sub directories using find command as:find .-name *.jpg -type fBut I am unable to get the result as find command is not permitted by the server administrator.Is there any way to find files without using find command.
View 14 Replies View Relatedevery-time i try to install, i get this
Error executing command
>>command=C:Windowssysnativecdedit.exe /create/d Ubuntu/application bootsector
>>retval=1
>>stderr=The boot configuration data store could not be opened
The system cannot find the file specified
>>stdout=
I want to scan a particular directory recursively and run a particular command with each file as input. For this I am using "find /dir/path". I dont want to write any long script containing loop on the output of "find". I want a single command which will allow me to run a command on each file of the "find" command output.
View 3 Replies View RelatedWhen I run find command with exec option, it just hangs on me. what am I doing wrong?
find /stdlist -type d -mtime 0 -exec cp -r {} joblogs ;
#!/bin/shLOOK_FOR="NTLMAuthenticationFilter"for i in `find ./ -name "*jar"`doecho "Looking in $i ..."grepjar -e $LOOK_FOR $idoneI wrote the script above, and try to find if there any file name LOOK_FOR exist in those jar,my quest is: grepjar -e $LOOK_FOR $ihere how can I check if there are any successful result , and output them ?
View 2 Replies View RelatedWhat is the difference between *.xml and *.xml in find command in Linux/macThe results of:find . -name *.xml and find . -name *.xml are different. But why?Also, is locate '*.xml' better than find? Which one is the most commonly used?
View 1 Replies View RelatedI've got a script where I have to parse out the last modified time for a large amount of files. Piping the output for "ls" into "cut" seems to work most of the time, but the output is unpredictable.The "fields" argument doesn't find the date modified columns consistently, and using character count is as well since the output can vary in width depending on the file name
View 3 Replies View RelatedI want to know the command which will list the local users created by me not system users.
View 6 Replies View RelatedHow to find info and contents of the SD card via linux terminal. I found a command "mount"in internet. According to it it's in dev/sdb/.. but I didn't found such. I saw dev/sdc/
View 5 Replies View Relatedcommand to find the Distribution of Linux.
View 7 Replies View Relatedi have this find command to find modified files and copy them.Code:find $SRC_DIR -type f -ctime -1|xargs -i cp --parents {} $BACKUP_DIR/$DAY/and it works good but it want to exclude files that exist in some folders like $SRC_DIR/cash and $SRC_DIR/woks/tmp
View 3 Replies View RelatedIf someone has done something wrong on a shared linux machine. If i want to find out who is that person or ip from where it is been done what are all the possible ways. 1 possibility I thought was to get the PID of the command and get other details from that PID?
View 4 Replies View Relatedt has been long time since i used the command that used to display the most widely used command in the distribution .It was in following format.(I guess it was a combination of history head sort grep or something like that)
50 ls -ltr
3 neat-tui
1 touch abc
I tried finding the command in google but wasnt able to find it
Ive tried to rsync from one ~/home on hdd a, to ~/home hdd b, using a live cd, but it returns a load of; eg:
rsync: opendir "/media/a2ab9331-effd-4855-8e0a-6c7f1a9d63b5/home/nnjond/.Skype" failed: Permission denied (13)
So i think i should fresh install and it would be convenient if i knew the refined commands to locate the saved files in /home hdd a, since 02_06_10 (not including all the hidden or deleted files), and then copy to a memory stick using the nautilus gui.
does anyone knows if i can find a configuration tool like "Yast" that works on Solaris 10 ?
View 1 Replies View RelatedMy goal is to find all pdf files on a remote machine, so I resort to the useful command find. So I type find .pdf or find .pdf" and I get nothing. I do the same on my machine and I get nothing. I do a regular search from the menu on my machine and I find quite a few pdf files. Would somebody please tell me what am I doing wrong?
View 5 Replies View RelatedI need to find out hardware information for the below items under Linux:
CPU (and cores)
CPU speed
Memory
Hard disks
OS version