If you are having trouble configuring your hardware or just want
to know what hardware is in your system, you can use the Hardware Browser application to display the
hardware that can be probed. To start the program from the desktop,
select (the main menu on the
panel) => =>
or type hwbrowser at a shell prompt. As shown in Figure 40-3,
it displays your CD-ROM devices, diskette drives, hard drives and
their partitions, network devices, pointing devices, system
devices, and video cards. Click on the category name in the left
menu, and the information is displayed.
You can also use the lspci command to
list all PCI devices. Use the command lspci
-v for more verbose information or lspci
-vv for very verbose output.
For example, lspci can be used to
determine the manufacturer, model, and memory size of a system's
video card:
00:00.0 Host bridge: ServerWorks CNB20LE Host Bridge (rev 06)
00:00.1 Host bridge: ServerWorks CNB20LE Host Bridge (rev 06)
00:01.0 VGA compatible controller: S3 Inc. Savage 4 (rev 04)
00:02.0 Ethernet controller: Intel Corp. 82557/8/9 [Ethernet Pro 100] (rev 08)
00:0f.0 ISA bridge: ServerWorks OSB4 South Bridge (rev 50)
00:0f.1 IDE interface: ServerWorks OSB4 IDE Controller
00:0f.2 USB Controller: ServerWorks OSB4/CSB5 OHCI USB Controller (rev 04)
01:03.0 SCSI storage controller: Adaptec AIC-7892P U160/m (rev 02)
01:05.0 RAID bus controller: IBM ServeRAID Controller
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The lspci is also useful to determine
the network card in your system if you do not know the manufacturer
or model number.