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#!/bin/bash
#
# Gather hardware information and dump into a folder.
#
# Load.
source $APP_BASE/lib/hydra/functions || exit 1
hydra_config_load
# Parameters
BASENAME="`basename $0`"
# This command could be converted to a "hydra <hydra> hwinfo" fact collector, storing results
# at $HYDRA_FOLDER/config/hardware if we had a way to uniquelly determine hardware UUID, independent
# from the operating system.
#
# Some references that might help:
#
# https://stackoverflow.com/questions/35883313/dmidecode-product-uuid-and-product-serial-what-is-the-difference
# https://wiki.debian.org/HowToIdentifyADevice/System
# https://unix.stackexchange.com/questions/211327/get-the-same-uuid-on-different-linux-distributions#211398
# https://stackoverflow.com/questions/10152762/best-way-to-get-machine-id-on-linux#10152797
# https://www.dmtf.org/sites/default/files/standards/documents/DSP0134_3.0.0.pdf
#
# Some files to look around:
#
# /sys/class/dmi/id/board_serial
# /sys/class/dmi/id/product_uuid
# /var/lib/dbus/machine-id
#
# This would work in some systems, while in others wont:
#
# manufacturer="`$SUDO dmidecode -s system-manufacturer`"
# version="`$SUDO dmidecode -s system-version`"
#
# Best way would either get a UUID from BIOS or build our own, manual database with arbitrary generated UUIDs.
# Sudo config
if [ "`whoami`" != 'root' ]; then
SUDO="sudo"
fi
if which lshw &> /dev/null; then
$SUDO lshw #> lshw.txt
#$SUDO lshw --json > lshw.json
#$SUDO lshw --xml > lshw.xml
fi
if which lscpu &> /dev/null; then
$SUDO lscpu #> lscpu.txt
fi
if which cpuid &> /dev/null; then
$SUDO cpuid #> cpuid.txt
fi
if which dmidecode &> /dev/null; then
$SUDO dmidecode #> dmidecode.txt
#$SUDO dmidecode --dump-bin dmidecode.bin
fi
if which lspci &> /dev/null; then
$SUDO lspci #> lspci.txt
fi
if which lsusb &> /dev/null; then
$SUDO lsusb #> lsusb.txt
fi
if which lsblk &> /dev/null; then
$SUDO lsblk -O #> lsblk.txt
fi
if which hwinfo &> /dev/null; then
$SUDO hwinfo #> hwinfo.txt
fi
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