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- From: jd@mars.nwc.navy.mil (John de la Garrigue)
- Subject: Re: How do I tell the model of a Sparc
- Message-ID: <BzA59t.266@avalon.nwc.navy.mil>
- Sender: usenet@avalon.nwc.navy.mil (NWC News Admin)
- Reply-To: jd@mars.nwc.navy.mil
- Organization: Science Applications International Corporation
- References: <1992Dec10.233737.11309@sol.ctr.columbia.edu>
- Date: Tue, 15 Dec 1992 02:51:29 GMT
- Lines: 27
-
- In article 11309@sol.ctr.columbia.edu, yjj@neptune.ctr.columbia.edu (Yuan Jiang) writes:
- >I have a couple of remote sites which I can submit my calculation
- >jobs to. I'd like to know whick is more powerful than the others
- >so that I always run the jobs on the fastest machine. but how
- >do I know what model or how powerful these remote computers are without
- >a chance to see their model plates.
-
-
- If you're running on Sun machines, you can use "dmesg" to get basic information
- about the system, such as cpu type, amount of core memory installed, type of
- tape and disk drives connected, etc. I use a program called "sysinfo" that
- also provides this information, and formats it in a more readable fashion.
-
- ---
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- /_____/ /____/
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- John de la Garrigue || Phone: 619/546-6192
- Site Manager || E-mail: jd@c3ot.saic.com
- Science Applications International Corp. (SAIC) ||
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- My views are not necessarily those of my employer, the US government,
- or anyone else for that matter.
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