Apart from lspci or dmesg in terminal, is there a tool with more of a GUI to list the hardware/software in my system in greater detail?
Fantajoe
Asked:
2019-04-03 23:10:45 +0800 CST
When I connect to an Ubuntu 18.4 server with ssh I get the following information:
Welcome to Ubuntu 18.04.2 LTS (GNU/Linux 4.15.0-46-generic x86_64)
* Documentation:
* Management:
* Support:
System information as of Wed Apr 3 06:39:53 UTC 2019
System load: 0.0 Processes: 151
Usage of /: 9.5% of 48.96GB Users logged in: 0
Memory usage: 11% IP address for ens160: 192.168.xxx.xxx
Swap usage: 0%
* Ubuntu's Kubernetes 1.14 distributions can bypass Docker and use containerd
directly, see xxxx or try it now with
snap install microk8s --classic
* Canonical Livepatch is available for installation.
- Reduce system reboots and improve kernel security. Activate at:
ubuntu.com/livepatch
8 packages can be updated.
8 updates are security updates.
Last login: Wed Apr 3 06:27:23 2019 from 192.168.xxx.xxx
What is the command to get this information to print again?
Sadaharu Wakisaka
Asked:
2018-12-01 02:42:27 +0800 CST
Sometimes I adore the HUD information or to have a favorite image picture on the front of the display layer (always on top and un-clickable).
That would look like this and help our operation or just for the family picture to encourage our work. Can anyone have the idea to make this happen on Linux/Ubuntu in near future?
Victor S
Asked:
2012-07-05 06:20:43 +0800 CST
I would like to change my "Device name" as shown in the settings panel. How do I do this?
NoSenseEtAl
Asked:
2011-12-20 06:16:25 +0800 CST
I tried googling it, but I can't find it. I am looking for:
number of threads in process X
total number of threads running currently