el 2005-12-01 darren kirby escribió:
> This isn't to say I don't appreciate testers and bug reports...
if this is of any use...
Filesystems supported:
udf | ntfs | iso9660 | vfat | msdos | ext2 |
ext3 |
Other possible supported filesystems (unloaded modules):
Traceback (most re
quoth the [EMAIL PROTECTED]:
> This seems to have tremendous potential. Having all this information in
> one standard form allows you to take snapshots of your system, and then
> if things break you can compare snapshots before and after to possibly
> get a hint of where to focus.
Yup. I was thin
This seems to have tremendous potential. Having all this information in
one standard form allows you to take snapshots of your system, and then
if things break you can compare snapshots before and after to possibly
get a hint of where to focus. This will be especially true when you add
the ability
Bob Sanders <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Sorry. The last one I worked with was -
Thanks... I guess thats probably about par for the course.. hehe
--
gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
darren kirby <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> I would like to do this thing right, so if you (anybody!) has ideas, advice,
> requests etc please try it out and let's talk. Am I missing anything that
> should be printed?
Thanks for the effort. It looks promising. I've downloaded but not
tried ye
quoth the Harry Putnam:
> I'm sure many such scripts have been written in the past 35yrs. I
> hoped a few would have become famous and available by name that I
> could simply edit.
Perhaps so, but I decided to write one anyway. Just 'stroking the beard' I
guess. It is in python, as I cannot sta
On Tue, 29 Nov 2005 08:36:38 -0600
Harry Putnam <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> You mentioned possibly obscure system inventory scripts in perl.
> So apparently you already know it can be a time consuming undertaking
> to dig one up with google, test it, etc etc.
>
> Do you know of one off the
Bob Sanders <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> It was never hidden and has always been available.
Not sure I understand that comment. Or rather I am sure I do not.
>The commands, excepting lshw, have been
> available since the 1970s. And lots of system inventory scripts ar
On Mon, 28 Nov 2005 22:31:28 -0600
Harry Putnam <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I want straight command line so redirect is possible, but a thorough
> summary. Not just hdw or pci or usb. I want that but also what
> filesystems,
df -h
cat /etc/fstab
> which users,
cat /
Scott Stoddard <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Harry Putnam wrote:
>> What is the standard or common way to compile a detailed yet succinct
>> listing of system info. Are there tools that do this? Or maybe one
>> of those 16 inch cmdlines
>> with 2 dozen pipes... :)
>>
>
> Well, if you're talking
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