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181 lines
6.4 KiB
Plaintext
181 lines
6.4 KiB
Plaintext
@node System Information, System Configuration, Users and Groups, Top
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@chapter System Information
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This chapter describes functions that return information about the
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particular machine that is in use---the type of hardware, the type of
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software, and the individual machine's name.
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@menu
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* Host Identification:: Determining the name of the machine.
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* Hardware/Software Type ID:: Determining the hardware type of the
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machine and what operating system it is
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running.
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@end menu
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@node Host Identification
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@section Host Identification
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This section explains how to identify the particular machine that your
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program is running on. The identification of a machine consists of its
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Internet host name and Internet address; see @ref{Internet Namespace}.
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The host name should always be a fully qualified domain name, like
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@w{@samp{crispy-wheats-n-chicken.ai.mit.edu}}, not a simple name like
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just @w{@samp{crispy-wheats-n-chicken}}.
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@pindex hostname
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@pindex hostid
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@pindex unistd.h
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Prototypes for these functions appear in @file{unistd.h}. The shell
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commands @code{hostname} and @code{hostid} work by calling them.
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@comment unistd.h
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@comment BSD
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@deftypefun int gethostname (char *@var{name}, size_t @var{size})
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This function returns the name of the host machine in the array
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@var{name}. The @var{size} argument specifies the size of this array,
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in bytes.
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The return value is @code{0} on success and @code{-1} on failure. In
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the GNU C library, @code{gethostname} fails if @var{size} is not large
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enough; then you can try again with a larger array. The following
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@code{errno} error condition is defined for this function:
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@table @code
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@item ENAMETOOLONG
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The @var{size} argument is less than the size of the host name plus one.
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@end table
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@pindex sys/param.h
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On some systems, there is a symbol for the maximum possible host name
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length: @code{MAXHOSTNAMELEN}. It is defined in @file{sys/param.h}.
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But you can't count on this to exist, so it is cleaner to handle
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failure and try again.
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@code{gethostname} stores the beginning of the host name in @var{name}
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even if the host name won't entirely fit. For some purposes, a
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truncated host name is good enough. If it is, you can ignore the
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error code.
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@end deftypefun
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@comment unistd.h
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@comment BSD
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@deftypefun int sethostname (const char *@var{name}, size_t @var{length})
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The @code{sethostname} function sets the name of the host machine to
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@var{name}, a string with length @var{length}. Only privileged
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processes are allowed to do this. Usually it happens just once, at
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system boot time.
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The return value is @code{0} on success and @code{-1} on failure.
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The following @code{errno} error condition is defined for this function:
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@table @code
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@item EPERM
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This process cannot set the host name because it is not privileged.
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@end table
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@end deftypefun
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@comment unistd.h
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@comment BSD
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@deftypefun {long int} gethostid (void)
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This function returns the ``host ID'' of the machine the program is
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running on. By convention, this is usually the primary Internet address
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of that machine, converted to a @w{@code{long int}}. However, some
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systems it is a meaningless but unique number which is hard-coded for
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each machine.
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@end deftypefun
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@comment unistd.h
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@comment BSD
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@deftypefun int sethostid (long int @var{id})
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The @code{sethostid} function sets the ``host ID'' of the host machine
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to @var{id}. Only privileged processes are allowed to do this. Usually
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it happens just once, at system boot time.
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The return value is @code{0} on success and @code{-1} on failure.
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The following @code{errno} error condition is defined for this function:
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@table @code
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@item EPERM
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This process cannot set the host name because it is not privileged.
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@item ENOSYS
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The operating system does not support setting the host ID. On some
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systems, the host ID is a meaningless but unique number hard-coded for
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each machine.
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@end table
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@end deftypefun
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@node Hardware/Software Type ID
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@section Hardware/Software Type Identification
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You can use the @code{uname} function to find out some information about
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the type of computer your program is running on. This function and the
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associated data type are declared in the header file
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@file{sys/utsname.h}.
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@pindex sys/utsname.h
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@comment sys/utsname.h
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@comment POSIX.1
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@deftp {Data Type} {struct utsname}
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The @code{utsname} structure is used to hold information returned
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by the @code{uname} function. It has the following members:
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@table @code
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@item char sysname[]
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This is the name of the operating system in use.
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@item char nodename[]
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This is the network name of this particular computer. In the GNU
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library, the value is the same as that returned by @code{gethostname};
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see @ref{Host Identification}.
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@item char release[]
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This is the current release level of the operating system implementation.
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@item char version[]
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This is the current version level within the release of the operating
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system.
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@item char machine[]
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This is a description of the type of hardware that is in use.
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Some systems provide a mechanism to interrogate the kernel directly for
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this information. On systems without such a mechanism, the GNU C
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library fills in this field based on the configuration name that was
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specified when building and installing the library.
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GNU uses a three-part name to describe a system configuration; the three
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parts are @var{cpu}, @var{manufacturer} and @var{system-type}, and they
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are separated with dashes. Any possible combination of three names is
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potentially meaningful, but most such combinations are meaningless in
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practice and even the meaningful ones are not necessarily supported by
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any particular GNU program.
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Since the value in @code{machine} is supposed to describe just the
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hardware, it consists of the first two parts of the configuration name:
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@samp{@var{cpu}-@var{manufacturer}}. For example, it might be one of these:
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@quotation
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@code{"sparc-sun"},
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@code{"i386-@var{anything}"},
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@code{"m68k-hp"},
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@code{"m68k-sony"},
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@code{"m68k-sun"},
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@code{"mips-dec"}
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@end quotation
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@end table
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@end deftp
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@comment sys/utsname.h
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@comment POSIX.1
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@deftypefun int uname (struct utsname *@var{info})
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The @code{uname} function fills in the structure pointed to by
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@var{info} with information about the operating system and host machine.
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A non-negative value indicates that the data was successfully stored.
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@code{-1} as the value indicates an error. The only error possible is
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@code{EFAULT}, which we normally don't mention as it is always a
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possibility.
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@end deftypefun
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