NAME | SYNOPSIS | DESCRIPTION | OPTIONS | OPERANDS | EXAMPLES | EXIT STATUS | ATTRIBUTES | SEE ALSO | DIAGNOSTICS
psrinfo displays information about processors. Each physical processor may support multiple virtual processors. Each virtual processor is an entity with its own interrupt ID, capable of executing independent threads.
Without the processor_id operand, psrinfo displays one line for each configured processor, displaying whether it is on-line, non-interruptible (designated by no-intr), off-line, or powered off, and when that status last changed. Use the processor_id operand to display information about a specific processor. See OPERANDS.
The following options are supported:
Silent mode. Displays 1 if the specified processor is fully on-line, and 0 if the specified processor is non-interruptible, off-line, or powered off.
Use silent mode when using psrinfo in shell scripts.
Display the number of physical processors in a system.
When combined with the -v option, reports additional information about each physical processor.
Verbose mode. Displays additional information about the specified processors, including: processor type, floating point unit type and clock speed. If any of this information cannot be determined, psrinfo displays unknown.
When combined with the -p option, reports additional information about each physical processor.
The following operands are supported:
The processor ID of the processor about which information is to be displayed.
Specify processor_id as an individual processor number (for example, 3), multiple processor numbers separated by spaces (for example, 1 2 3), or a range of processor numbers (for example, 1-4). It is also possible to combine ranges and (individual or multiple) processor_ids (for example, 1‐3 5 7‐8 9).
The following example displays information about all configured processors in verbose mode.
psrinfo -v |
The following example uses psrinfo in a shell script to determine if a processor is on-line.
if [ "`psrinfo -s 3 2> /dev/null`" -eq 1 ] then echo "processor 3 is up" fi |
With no additional arguments, the -p option displays a single integer: the number of physical processors in the system:
> psrinfo -p 8 |
psrinfo also accepts command line arguments (processor IDs):
> psrinfo -p 0 512 # IDs 0 and 512 exist on the 1 # same physical processor > psrinfo -p 0 1 # IDs 0 and 1 exist on different 2 # physical processors |
In this example, virtual processors 0 and 512 exist on the same phyical processor. Virtual processors 0 and 1 do not. This is specific to this example and is and not a general rule.
See attributes(5) for descriptions of the following attributes:
ATTRIBUTE TYPE |
ATTRIBUTE VALUE |
---|---|
Availability |
SUNWcsu |
NAME | SYNOPSIS | DESCRIPTION | OPTIONS | OPERANDS | EXAMPLES | EXIT STATUS | ATTRIBUTES | SEE ALSO | DIAGNOSTICS