To use it, simply go to a terminal and type 'inxi -F' and it will display a full (-F) system information output. 'inxi -h' will show more options. It was originally made for IRC troubleshooting, so it works in almost every IRC client (and comes bundled in some).
screenFetch is a "Bash Screenshot Information Tool". This handy Bash script can be used to generate one of those nifty terminal theme information + ASCII distribution logos you see in everyone's screenshots nowadays. It will auto-detect your distribution and display an ASCII version of that distribution's logo and some valuable information to the right. There are options to specify no ASCII art, colors, taking a screenshot upon displaying info, and even customizing the screenshot command! This script is very easy to add to and can easily be extended.
We want following hardware information on servers running Citrix Hypervisor.
Are these available via xe or Xen API? Vmware vCenter provides these via SDK API as well as web browser GUI.
Ssh connections are sometimes prohibited on production environment. So, we prefer xmlrpc/json API.
We know some CPU and memory information is available via host-cpu-info and host-param-list but not enough.
PCI info is exposed via the SDK/API ( -project.github.io/xen-api/classes/pci.html), but I think it's not exposed via the xe CLI ( -us/citrix-hypervisor/command-line-interface.html). Using the PowerShell module, for example, you can obtain it via the cmdlet Get-XenPCI.
Shell scripts are usually faster and more adapted for this kind of application. There are many CLI applications that you can adapt or leverage directly.On Linux, you can get hostname and model information with hostnamectl.There are other utilities that aggregate hardware information, the most well-known is probably neofetch. It has many variants, see:
I have tried to use the disk many times but I always get a black screen whenever I select any of the mentioned options. I read that my system may not be compatible but I think that's unlikely because the requirements are very simple. Attached are screenshots of System information.