From 6b965976bd596565ce808d0cd2856fd2a4f2dd61 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Elijah Saxon Date: Thu, 10 Mar 2005 11:22:27 +0000 Subject: now we use hwinfo which is soooo much better than discover for this. also, now it actually finds all disks in partition report. --- handlers/sys | 48 ++++++++++++++++++++++++------------------------ 1 file changed, 24 insertions(+), 24 deletions(-) (limited to 'handlers/sys') diff --git a/handlers/sys b/handlers/sys index 140db76..be8f3fc 100755 --- a/handlers/sys +++ b/handlers/sys @@ -14,14 +14,14 @@ # (MAKE SURE YOU PARTITION THE CORRECT DISK!!!) # # (3) hardware information. -# a simple report is generated of the kernel modules, the devices, -# and the model of the hardware which 'discover' is able to detect. +# write to a text file the important things which hwinfo can discover. +# getconf packages yes getconf packagesfile /var/backups/dpkg-selections.txt getconf partitions yes -getconf partitionsfile /var/backups/partitions.*.txt +getconf partitionsfile '/var/backups/partitions.*.txt' getconf hardware yes getconf hardwarefile /var/backups/hardware.txt @@ -38,11 +38,15 @@ if [ "$partitions" == "yes" ]; then warning "can't find sfdisk, skipping partition report." partitions="no" fi + if [ ! -x "`which hwinfo`" ]; then + warning "can't find hwinfo, skipping partition report." + partitions="no" + fi fi if [ "$hardware" == "yes" ]; then - if [ ! -x "`which discover`" ]; then - warning "can't find discover, skipping hardware report." + if [ ! -x "`which hwinfo`" ]; then + warning "can't find hwinfo, skipping hardware report." hardware="no" fi fi @@ -59,22 +63,17 @@ fi ## PARTITIONS ############################# -# # here we use sfdisk to dump a listing of all the partitions. # these files can be used to directly partition a disk of the same size. -# if [ "$partitions" == "yes" ]; then - for i in `sfdisk -l | grep "^/dev/" | awk '{print $1}'`; do - devices=`echo $i | sed 's/[0-9]//'` - done - devices=`echo $devices | sort | uniq` + devices=`hwinfo --disk | grep "Device File" | cut -d\ -f5` for dev in $devices; do - # remove leading /dev/ - label=${devices#/dev/} - # replace any remaining '/' + [ -b $dev ] || continue + label=${dev#/dev/} label=${label//\//-} outputfile=${partitionsfile//__star__/$label} + debug "sfdisk -d $dev > $outputfile" sfdisk -d $dev > $outputfile done fi @@ -82,18 +81,19 @@ fi ## HARDWARE ############################# # -# here we use discover to dump a table listing all the +# here we use hwinfo to dump a table listing all the # information we can find on the hardware of this machine # if [ "$hardware" == "yes" ]; then - printf "%15s%15s %s / %s\n" "kernel module" "device" "vender" "model" > $hardwarefile - printf "%15s%15s %s / %s\n\n" "=============" "======" "======" "=====" >> $hardwarefile - oldifs=$IFS - IFS=$'\t\n' - discover --format="'%m'\t'%d'\t'%V'\t'%M'\n" all | \ - while read module device vender model - do printf "%15s%15s %s / %s\n" "${module//\'/}" "${device//\'/}" "${vender//\'/}" "${model//\'/}" >> $hardwarefile - done - IFS=$oldifs + if [ -f $hardwarefile ]; then + rm $hardwarefile + fi + touch $hardwarefile + echo -e "\n\n====================== summary ======================\n" >> $hardwarefile + hwinfo --short --cpu --network --disk --pci >> $hardwarefile + for flag in cpu network disk bios pci; do + echo -e "\n\n====================== $flag ======================\n" >> $hardwarefile + hwinfo --$flag >> $hardwarefile + done fi -- cgit v1.2.3