From 89f013bb4d68b0df17131df47f320ab4a44f060f Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Yuri Chornoivan Date: Fri, 23 Feb 2018 20:34:43 +0200 Subject: Create stable folder and move stable docs there --- docs/mcc-help/en/lspcidrake.xml | 52 ----------------------------------------- 1 file changed, 52 deletions(-) delete mode 100644 docs/mcc-help/en/lspcidrake.xml (limited to 'docs/mcc-help/en/lspcidrake.xml') diff --git a/docs/mcc-help/en/lspcidrake.xml b/docs/mcc-help/en/lspcidrake.xml deleted file mode 100644 index dc91ef63..00000000 --- a/docs/mcc-help/en/lspcidrake.xml +++ /dev/null @@ -1,52 +0,0 @@ -
- - Display Your PCI, USB and PCMCIA - Information - - lspcidrake - - - This tool - You can start this tool from the command line, by typing lspcidrake. - can only be started and used on the command line. It will give - some more information if used under root. - - lspcidrake gives the list of all the connected devices to the computer - (USB, PCI and PCMCIA) and the used drivers. It needs the ldetect and - ldetect-lst packages to work. - - - - - - - - With the -v option, lspcidrake adds the vendor and device - identifications. - - lspcidrake often generates very long lists, so, to find an - information, it is often used in a pipeline with the grep command, like in - these examples: - - Information about the graphic card; - - lspcidrake | grep VGA - - Information about the network - - lspcidrake | grep -i network - - -i to ignore case distinctions. - - In this screenshot below, you can see the action of the -v option for - lspcidrake and the -i option for grep. - - - - - - - - There is another tool that gives information about the hardware, it is - called dmidecode (under root) -
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