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- UUUUNNNNAAAAMMMMEEEE((((1111)))) UUUUNNNNAAAAMMMMEEEE((((1111))))
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- NNNNAAAAMMMMEEEE
- uname - identify the current IRIX system
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- SSSSYYYYNNNNOOOOPPPPSSSSIIIISSSS
- uuuunnnnaaaammmmeeee [ ----ssssnnnnrrrrvvvvmmmmppppaaaaddddRRRR ]
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- uuuunnnnaaaammmmeeee [ ----VVVV INSTVERSIONNUM ]
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- uuuunnnnaaaammmmeeee [ ----SSSS nodename ]
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- DDDDEEEESSSSCCCCRRRRIIIIPPPPTTTTIIIIOOOONNNN
- _u_n_a_m_e prints information that identifies the current IRIX system to
- standard output. The string IRIX64 is printed on systems that support
- 64-bit addressing (pointers); also see the KKKKEEEERRRRNNNN____PPPPOOOOIIIINNNNTTTTEEEERRRRSSSS argument to
- _s_y_s_c_o_n_f(1).
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- The options cause selected information returned by _u_n_a_m_e(2) to be
- printed:
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- ----aaaa Behave as though all of the options ----mmmmnnnnrrrrssssvvvv were specified.
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- ----mmmm Print the machine hardware name. This is the type of CPU board that
- the system is running on, e.g. IIIIPPPP22222222.
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- ----nnnn Print the hostname or nodename. The nodename is the name by which
- the system is known to communications networks.
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- ----pppp Print the (informal) name of the current system's instruction set
- architecture. See the SSSSIIII____AAAARRRRCCCCHHHHIIIITTTTEEEECCCCTTTTUUUURRRREEEE section of _ssss_yyyy_ssss_iiii_nnnn_ffff_oooo(2).
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- ----rrrr Print the operating system release. This string begins with one of
- the following forms: _m._n or _m._n._a where _m is the major release
- number, _n is the minor release number and _a is the (optional)
- maintenance level of the release; e.g. 3333....2222 or 3333....2222....1111.
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- ----RRRR Print the extended release name, usually the name of a hardware
- specific release. Implies the ----rrrr option. The string returned will
- be empty (that is, the ----rrrr and ----RRRR options will produce the same
- output) on the base OS release. This option shows additional
- information similar to that printed on the CD label for hardware
- specific releases.
-
- ----ssss Print the (operating) system name (the default).
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- ----SSSS _nnnn_oooo_dddd_eeee_nnnn_aaaa_mmmm_eeee
- Change the hostname or nodename to the specified _nnnn_oooo_dddd_eeee_nnnn_aaaa_mmmm_eeee. This
- changes only the runtime name, and is normally unused. The
- _h_o_s_t_n_a_m_e(1) command is the recommended method of setting this field,
- because it will allow for longer names. _h_o_s_t_n_a_m_e uses the contents
- of ////eeeettttcccc////ssssyyyyssss____iiiidddd to set the name during system startup. Only the
- super-user is allowed this capability.
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- PPPPaaaaggggeeee 1111
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- UUUUNNNNAAAAMMMMEEEE((((1111)))) UUUUNNNNAAAAMMMMEEEE((((1111))))
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- ----vvvv Print the operating system version. This is the date and time that
- the operating system was generated, and has the form: _m_m_d_d_h_h_m_m.
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- The ----dddd and ----VVVV options decode the inst version-number, a 10-digit integer
- that, if present, is the last field in the release-name string returned
- by `_u_n_a_m_e -_r'. Alpha and Beta releases have inst version-numbers, final
- releases do not. This number represents encoded information about the
- origin of the release.
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- `_u_n_a_m_e -_d' attempts to report the running system's inst version
- information; if the release has no inst version-number, _u_n_a_m_e displays an
- error message.
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- `_u_n_a_m_e -_V _I_N_S_T_V_E_R_S_I_O_N_N_U_M' interprets and displays the information encoded
- in INSTVERSIONNUM; if the number is invalid, _u_n_a_m_e displays an error
- message.
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- NNNNOOOOTTTTEEEESSSS
- Do not confuse the 8-digit version number returned by `_u_n_a_m_e -_v'--present
- in all releases--with the 10-digit inst version-number. The two serve
- different--if somewhat overlapping--purposes.
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- SSSSEEEEEEEE AAAALLLLSSSSOOOO
- hostname(1), inst(1M), sysconf(1), versions(1M), uname(2), sysinfo(2),
- sys_id(4)
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- PPPPaaaaggggeeee 2222
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