I have yet to find a single machine (and I just tested it on all 8 in my immediate vicinity) that the command I gave won't give you back the model number of the card.
Can anyone provide an example of a machine where:
sudo lspci -v | grep VGA
doesn't give you the exact model of the video card?
Glenn
On Wed, Jan 7, 2009 at 5:55 PM, Jon Pruente [email protected] wrote:
They aren't scriptable, but often they are faster than getting all the flags just right on a command set. On most machines lspci outputs less than two screen pages of info. lspci is the command to deal with here and it's output is nearly always easy enough to wade through without needing a custom grep/filter set to get what you need. Heck, (nearly?) all AGP video chips show up on PCI:1:0:0, so that's usually the only thing to look for if it's an AGP machine.
Jon.
On Wed, Jan 7, 2009 at 1:38 PM, Billy Crook [email protected] wrote:
As root, or via sudo, run: /sbin/lspci -nnvb | grep -i VGA -A 100 | grep -i "kernel module" -B 100
-m 1
That should adequately identify your graphics chipset. Eyeballs aren't scriptable.
On Wed, Jan 7, 2009 at 13:29, Billy Crook [email protected] wrote:
As root, or via sudo, run: /sbin/lspci -nnvb | grep VGA
That should adequately identify your graphics chipset.
On Wed, Jan 7, 2009 at 12:42, Haworth, Michael A. [email protected] wrote:
Hey – what is the command to have Fedora list back the video card in my laptop? I remember Monty telling me the command once, but it didn't
stick in
the brain…
Michael Haworth
PAS Technologies Inc.
Direct Line: (816) 556-5157
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