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sysdata(1)		    General Commands Manual		    sysdata(1)

NAME
       sysdata - find basic hardware system data

SYNOPSIS
       sysdata

DESCRIPTION
       After  the  atlc	 package is built, a small benchmark is	run as part of
       the testing procedure. This benchmark tries  to	get  some  information
       about  the hardware. The	program	sysdata	displays the same hardware in-
       formation that the benchmark will display, but runs in a	fraction of  a
       second, whereas the benchmark can take from 19 s	(quad 1.4 GHz Itainium
       2  machine)  to 14,906 s	(for a very old	33.3 MHz Cray Y-MP). There are
       no options or arguments to sysdata

       The information gathered	on hardware and	software both developed	by the
       same company (i.e. Solaris on Suns, AIX on IBM RS/6000,	IRIX  on  SGI,
       ...  etc	 etc)  is  generally  more  informative	 than the free systems
       (Linux, NetBSD, OpenBSD,	FreeBSD) where it is usually impossible	to get
       much hardware information.

EXAMPLES
       Here are	some examples of the use of sysdata on a  number  of  systems.
       The  large number of examples is	for my own use as much as anything, so
       I can keep track	of the development of sysdata and see easily where  it
       needs extending.	Examples are presented for:

       1) Sun Ultra 80 running Solaris 9
       2) HP C3000 running HP-UX 11
       3) SGI Octane running IRIX 6.5.16
       4) IBM RS/6000 running AIX 5.2
       5) Dec Alpha 600a Personal Workstation running Tru64 5.1B
       6) Cray Y-MP running UNICOS 9
       7) Sun SPARCstation 20 running NetBSD 1.6
       8) Sun SPARCstation 20 running OpenBSD 3.2
       9) Sun SPARCstation 20 running Debian Linux
       10) Sun SPARCstation 20 running Solaris 2.5
       11) Generic PC with 350 MHz Pentium II running Redhat Linux 7.2

       Here's the output from sysdata on these 11 systems.

       e.g. 1 (Sun Ultra 80 running Solaris 9)
       Hardware	provider:    Sun_Microsystems
       Hardware	platform:    SUNW,Ultra-80
       Machine:		     sun4u
       Sysname:		     SunOS
       Release:		     5.9
       Version:		     Generic_112233-06
       Nodename:	     sparrow
       #CPUs supported:	     4
       #CPUs online:	     4
       CPU type:	     sparcv9
       FPU type:	     sparcv9
       Speed:		     450 MHz
       RAM:		     4096 Mb
       L1 data cache	     unknown kB
       L1 instruction cache: unknown kB
       L2 cache:	     unknown kB

       Here's an example on a HP 9000 series Visualize C3000 workstation, fit-
       ted with	one 400	MHz PA-RISC 8500 CPU and 1.5 Gb	of RAM

       e.g. 2 (HP 9000 series Visualize	C3000)
       Hardware	provider:    HP
       Hardware	platform:    unknown
       Machine:		     9000/785
       Sysname:		     HP-UX
       Release:		     B.11.00
       Version:		     A
       Nodename:	     robin
       #CPUs supported:	     1
       #CPUs online:	     1
       CPU type:	     532
       FPU type:	     1048577
       Speed:		     400.0 MHz
       RAM:		     1536 Mb
       L1 data cache	     unknown kb
       L1 instruction cache: unknown kb
       L2 cache:	     unknown kb

       Here's  another	example	this time on an	SGI Octane R10000 with 2 x 195
       MHz processors. Note the	CPU and	FPU types reported at not  the	R10000
       and R10010 that are reported by SGI's hinv. sysdata is not meant	to re-
       place  other  more  sophisticated  ways of obtaining system information
       (such as	hinv on	IRIX), but its data is useful to record	for benchmark-
       ing purposes.

       e.g. 3 (SGI Octane R1000)
       Hardware	provider:    SGI
       Hardware	platform:    unknown
       Machine:		     IP30
       Sysname:		     IRIX64
       Release:		     6.5
       Version:		     04101931
       Nodename:	     owl
       #CPUs supported:	     unknown
       #CPUs online:	     2
       CPU type:	     2343
       FPU type:	     2304
       Speed:		     195 MHz
       RAM:		     1024 Mb
       L1 data cache	     32	kB
       L1 instruction cache: 32	kB
       L2 cache:	     1024 kB

       Here's an example using an IBM RS/6000 F50 with 4 x 332 MHz CPUs	and  1
       GB of RAM.

       e.g. 4 (IBM RS/6000 F50)
       Hardware	provider:    IBM
       Hardware	platform:    unknown
       Machine:		     000245984C00
       Sysname:		     AIX
       Release:		     2
       Version:		     5
       Nodename:	     starling
       #CPUs supported:	     unknown
       #CPUs online:	     4
       CPU type:	     unknown
       FPU type:	     unknown
       Speed:		     unknown MHz
       RAM:		     1024 Mb
       L1 data cache	     unknown kB
       L1 instruction cache: unknown kB
       L2 cache:	     unknown kB

       And  here's  an	example	from a single 599 MHz processor	Dec Alpha 600a
       Personal	Workstation running Tru64 5.1B

       e.g. 5 (Dec Alpha 600a Personal Workstation)
       Hardware	provider:    unknown
       Hardware	platform:    Digital_Personal_WorkStation_600au
       Machine:		     alpha
       Sysname:		     OSF1
       Release:		     V5.1
       Version:		     2650
       Nodename:	     dobermann.localhost.ntlworld.co
       #CPUs supported:	     1
       #CPUs online:	     1
       CPU type:	     EV5.6_(21164A)
       FPU type:	     unknown
       Speed:		     599 MHz
       RAM:		     1024 Mb
       L1 data cache	     unknown kb
       L1 instruction cache: unknown kb
       L2 cache:	     unknown kb

       Here's some data	collected on a very old	Cray Y-MP,  which  was	intro-
       duced in	1991.

       e.g 6 (Cray Y-MP	running	UNICOS)

       Hardware	provider:    Cray
       Hardware	platform:    Y-MP
       Machine:		     CRAY_Y-MP
       Sysname:		     sn5176
       Release:		     9.0.2.2
       Version:		     sin.0
       Nodename:	     sn5176
       #CPUs supported:	     unknown
       #CPUs online:	     4
       CPU type:	     unknown
       FPU type:	     unknown
       Speed:		     33.3 MHz
       RAM:		     unknown Mb
       L1 data cache	     unknown kb
       L1 instruction cache: unknown kb
       L2 cache:	     unknown kb

       That  is	 all the examples of commercial	hardware running the operating
       systems made by the manufacturers of the	hardware.  The	following  are
       free  UNIX  versions. In	these cases the	data gathered is never as com-
       plete. In particular the	amoumt of memory reported if often  less  than
       the  real  amount  due  to memory taken by the operating	system (kernel
       etc). The number	of processors the system can support is	 never	avail-
       able.

       Here's  the  first such non-commercial UNIX from	a single processor Sun
       SPARCstation 20 running NetBSD 1.6.

       e.g. 7 (Sun SPARCstation	20 running NetBSD 1.6)
       Hardware	provider:    unknown
       Hardware	platform:    unknown
       Machine:		     sparc
       Sysname:		     NetBSD
       Release:		     1.6
       Version:		     NetBSD_1.6_(GENERIC)_#0:_Mon_Sep__9_08:2sparc
       Nodename:	     blackbird
       #CPUs supported:	     unknown
       #CPUs online:	     1
       CPU	     type:			 rg:/autobuild/sparc/OBJ/auto-
       build/src/sys/arch/sparc/compile/GENERIC
       FPU type:	     unknown
       Speed:		     unknown MHz
       RAM:		     255 Mb
       L1 data cache	     unknown kb
       L1 instruction cache: unknown kb
       L2 cache:	     unknown kb

       Here's data from	a Sun SPARCstation 20 running OpenBSD 3.2. The machine
       has  320	 Mb  of	RAM, not 318 Mb	as indicated. The number of processors
       the system supports is reported as unknown, but should the system  have
       been running Solaris 9, as in the example 1 (sparrow), then this	infor-
       mation  would  have  been  determined,  but  it	is not available under
       OpenBSD - or Solaris 2.5	for that matter.

       e.g. 8 (Sun SPARCstation	20 running OpenBSD 3.2)
       Hardware	provider:    unknown
       Hardware	platform:    unknown
       Machine:		     sparc
       Sysname:		     OpenBSD
       Release:		     3.2
       Version:		     GENERIC#36
       Nodename:	     crow.crow.localdomain
       #CPUs supported:	     unknown
       #CPUs online:	     1
       CPU type:	     unknown
       FPU type:	     unknown
       Speed:		     unknown MHz
       RAM:		     319 Mb
       L1 data cache	     unknown kb
       L1 instruction cache: unknown kb
       L2 cache:	     unknown kb
       The next	machine	is a Sun SPARCstation 20  running  Debian  Linux.  The
       version	of  Debian is unknown, but clearly sysdata is unable to	deter-
       mine this.

       e.g. 9 (Sun SPARCstation	20 running Debian Linux)

       Hardware	provider:    unknown
       Hardware	platform:    unknown
       Machine:		     sparc
       Sysname:		     Linux
       Release:		     2.2.20
       Version:		     #1_Fri_Nov_16_15:48:02_EST_2001
       Nodename:	     dove
       #CPUs supported:	     unknown
       #CPUs online:	     1
       CPU type:	     unknown
       FPU type:	     unknown
       Speed:		     unknown MHz
       RAM:		     281 Mb
       L1 data cache	     unknown kb
       L1 instruction cache: unknown kb
       L2 cache:	     unknown kb

       Here's data from	a Sun SPARCstation 20 running Solaris 2.5 (SunOS 5.5).
       The machine probably does have 352 Mb of	RAM as reported. The number of
       processors the system supports is reported as unknown, but  should  the
       system have been	running	Solaris	9, as in the example 1 (sparrow), then
       this  information  would	 have been determined, but it is not available
       under Solaris 2.5.

       e.g. 10 (Sun SPARCstation 20 Solaris 2.5)
       Hardware	provider:    Sun_Microsystems
       Hardware	platform:    SUNW,SPARCstation-20
       Machine:		     sun4m
       Sysname:		     SunOS
       Release:		     5.5
       Version:		     Generic
       Nodename:	     bluetit
       #CPUs supported:	     unknown
       #CPUs online:	     2
       CPU type:	     sparc
       FPU type:	     sparc
       Speed:		     125 MHz
       RAM:		     352 Mb
       L1 data cache	     unknown kb
       L1 instruction cache: unknown kb
       L2 cache:	     unknown kb

       Here's a	standard PC, fitted with one processor

       e.g. 11 (350 MHz	Pentium	II PC running Redhat Linux)
       Hardware	provider:    unknown
       Hardware	platform:    unknown
       Machine:		     i686
       Sysname:		     Linux
       Release:		     2.4.18-5
       Version:		     #1_Mon_Jun_10_15:31:48_EDT_2002
       Nodename:	     tiger
       #CPUs supported:	     unknown
       #CPUs online:	     1
       CPU type:	     unknown
       FPU type:	     unknown
       Speed:		     unknown MHz
       RAM:		     123 Mb
       L1 data cache	     unknown kb
       L1 instruction cache: unknown kb
       L2 cache:	     unknown kb

FILES
       sysdata does not	read/write any files.

SEE ALSO
       atlc(1)
       create_bmp_for_circ_in_circ(1)
       create_bmp_for_circ_in_rect(1)
       create_bmp_for_microstrip_coupler(1)
       create_bmp_for_rect_cen_in_rect(1)
       create_bmp_for_rect_cen_in_rect_coupler(1)
       create_bmp_for_rect_in_circ(1)
       create_bmp_for_rect_in_rect(1)
       create_bmp_for_stripline_coupler(1)
       create_bmp_for_symmetrical_stripline(1)
       design_coupler(1)
       find_optimal_dimensions_for_microstrip_coupler(1)
       hinv - SGI's IRIX only.
       readbin(1)

       http://atlc.sourceforge.net		  - Home page
       http://sourceforge.net/projects/atlc	  - Download area
       atlc-X.Y.Z/docs/html-docs/index.html	  - HTML docs
       atlc-X.Y.Z/docs/qex-december-1996/atlc.pdf - theory paper
       atlc-X.Y.Z/examples			  - examples

Dr. David Kirkby	   atlc-4.5.0 28th Sep 2003		    sysdata(1)

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