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06.28.2006 at 10:35AM PDT, ID: 21902374
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commands to get system information for AIX
Zone: IBM AIX Unix
Tags: aix, command, get, system
Dear experts,

   I would like to know as a regular unix user, how what commands can get the information of AIX 4.x and 5.x system
CPU clock speed (in MHz or GHz),
memory size (in MB or GB),
swap size (in MB or GB),
hard disk volume (in GB, not filesystem size)
System model (Such as J6700)
System Serial number (if possible)

   I want to put those commands into a script so end users can run it to get the information for the AIX they are login.
As root, I can get those information and I would like to know the commands for regular user.
Most important information is the CPU speed, physical memory size, swap size, and disk volume.

Thanks in advance.
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Question Stats
Zone: OS
Question Asked By: wesly_chen
Solution Provided By: JulieBouillon
Participating Experts: 2
Solution Grade: A
Views: 726
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06.28.2006 at 11:06AM PDT, ID: 17003494

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06.28.2006 at 03:02PM PDT, ID: 17005327

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06.28.2006 at 03:36PM PDT, ID: 17005521

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06.28.2006 at 04:09PM PDT, ID: 17005690

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06.28.2006 at 09:32PM PDT, ID: 17006881

Rank: Guru

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06.29.2006 at 01:56AM PDT, ID: 17007746

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06.29.2006 at 09:00AM PDT, ID: 17010821

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06.29.2006 at 11:57AM PDT, ID: 17012407

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06.29.2006 at 12:09PM PDT, ID: 17012510

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06.28.2006 at 11:06AM PDT, ID: 17003494
Hi,

You can use the prtconf command to list your AIX hardware configuration, including CPU's, memory, adapters, disks and network. The prtconf command is available since AIX 4.3.3 (IIRC), and of course for AIX 5. If you are running older versions of AIX, here's a list of commands that can/could provide the same information:
 - lscfg [-v] -> devices (-v = verbose for microcode levels, etc)
 - lsdev -Cc adapter -> adapter cards
 - lsdev -Cc disk -> disks
 - lsdev -Cc processor -> CPU's
 - lsattr -El sys0 -> serial number, model number, memory
 - lsvg -o -> active volume groups
 - lsvg -p vgname -> disk drives in VG
 - lsvg -l  vgname -> LV's in VG
 - lslv  lvname -> LV detail
 - lslv -l lvname -> LV disk location
 - lspv -> disks
 - lspv -l hdisk# -> LV's residing on a disk
 - lsdev -Cc if -> List network interfaces

See the man pages for those commands. If you have prtconf on one of your server, you can have a look at it since it is only a shell script. You will then see example of how to use the previous commands.
Accepted Solution
 
06.28.2006 at 03:02PM PDT, ID: 17005327
prtconf is the right command I want. However, I've AIX 4.3.3.0 which
"prtconf" doesn't show "Processor Clock Speed".
Any command can show CPU speed for AIX 4.3.x
 
06.28.2006 at 03:36PM PDT, ID: 17005521
Indeed AIX 4.3 is rather old... Maybe this command:
lsattr -El proc0

where 0 is the number of your processor
 
06.28.2006 at 04:09PM PDT, ID: 17005690
> oslevel
4.3.3.0
> lsattr -El proc0
state enable         Processor state False
type  PowerPC_POWER3 Processor type  False

It shoe the CPU type, not the CPU clock speed.
> prtconf | grep "Processor Type"
Processor Type:  PowerPC_POWER3
 
06.28.2006 at 09:32PM PDT, ID: 17006881

Rank: Guru

1) POSIX standard OS Version
 uname -a
2) AIX version and patchlevel
 oslevel -r
3) All devices
 lscfg -vp

> Any command can show CPU speed for AIX 4.3.x
For 604e-s found from feature codes, printed on CPU board
 
06.29.2006 at 01:56AM PDT, ID: 17007746
Let's try this one:
#!/bin/ksh
typeset -i16 CPUSPEED=16#`lscfg -vp | grep "PS=" | tail -1 | cut -f2 -d'=' | cut -f1 -d','`
typeset -i MHZ=$CPUSPEED/1000000
echo $MHZ


Explanation:
lscfg -vp returns VPD data with device information
the grep get rid of unwanted lines, the tail keep the last line (you may have several lines), then we extract the CPU speed
The CPU speed is expressed in hexadecimal hence the typeset -i16=16#<hex value>
We convert the value to something more human readable
And finally display the value

Not tested under AIX 4.3 since I don't have such old config anymore. I hope it works.
If it's not working, I'm afraid we will need to use some kind of table to extrapolate the CPU speed.
Assisted Solution
 
06.29.2006 at 09:00AM PDT, ID: 17010821
 
06.29.2006 at 11:57AM PDT, ID: 17012407
the script works.
And
lscfg -vp
also provide some more useful information.
 
06.29.2006 at 12:09PM PDT, ID: 17012510
Thanks very much.

The summary for my question:
prtconf : memory size, swap size, model, number of CPU, CPU clock (AIX 5.x above)
model : Model number
--For CPU clock spped --
#!/bin/ksh
typeset -i16 CPUSPEED=16#`lscfg -vp | grep "PS=" | tail -1 | cut -f2 -d'=' | cut -f1 -d','`
typeset -i MHZ=$CPUSPEED/1000000
echo $MHZ
---
lscfg -vp : for serial number and hardware configuration


Those IBM RS6000 machines we have are loaned from IBM as partnership.
They will upgrade them to AIX 5.3.x soon.
 
 
20080236-EE-VQP-29