Using the prtconf Command
The prtconf command displays the Solaris device tree. This tree includes all the
devices probed by OpenBoot firmware, as well as additional devices, like individual
disks. The output of prtconf also includes the total amount of system memory, and
shows an excerpt of prtconf output (truncated to save space).
prtconf Command Output (Truncated)
CODE EXAMPLE 8-6
# prtconf
System Configuration:
Memory size: 1024 Megabytes
System Peripherals (Software Nodes):
SUNW,Sun-Fire-V445
packages (driver not attached)
SUNW,builtin-drivers (driver not attached)
deblocker (driver not attached)
disk-label (driver not attached)
terminal-emulator (driver not attached)
dropins (driver not attached)
kbd-translator (driver not attached)
obp-tftp (driver not attached)
SUNW,i2c-ram-device (driver not attached)
SUNW,fru-device (driver not attached)
ufs-file-system (driver not attached)
chosen (driver not attached)
openprom (driver not attached)
client-services (driver not attached)
options, instance #0
aliases (driver not attached)
memory (driver not attached)
virtual-memory (driver not attached)
SUNW,UltraSPARC-IIIi (driver not attached)
memory-controller, instance #0
SUNW,UltraSPARC-IIIi (driver not attached)
memory-controller, instance #1 ...
The prtconf command -p option produces output similar to the OpenBoot
show-devs command. This output lists only those devices compiled by the system
firmware.
Using the prtdiag Command
The prtdiag command displays a table of diagnostic information that summarizes
the status of system components.
Sun Microsystems
sun4u
Chapter 8 Diagnostics
193
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