10.2. Information on the hardware

Apart from the directories associated to the different processes, /proc also contains a myriad of information on the hardware present in your machine. A list of files from the /proc directory gives the following:

$ ls -d [a-z]*
apm      dma          interrupts  loadavg  mounts      rtc       swaps
bus/     fb           ioports     locks    mtrr        scsi/     sys/
cmdline  filesystems  kcore       meminfo  net/        self/     tty/
cpuinfo  fs/          kmsg        misc     partitions  slabinfo  uptime
devices  ide/         ksyms       modules  pci         stat      version
$

For example, if we look at the contents of /proc/interrupts, we can see that it contains the list of interrupts currently used by the system, along with the peripheral which holds them. Similarly, ioports contains the list of input/output address ranges currently busy, and lastly dma does the same for DMA channels. Therefore, in order to chase down a conflict, look at the contents of these three files:
$ cat interrupts
           CPU0
  0:     127648          XT-PIC  timer
  1:       5191          XT-PIC  keyboard
  2:          0          XT-PIC  cascade
  5:       1402          XT-PIC  xirc2ps_cs
  8:          1          XT-PIC  rtc
 10:          0          XT-PIC  ESS Solo1
 12:       2631          XT-PIC  PS/2 Mouse
 13:          1          XT-PIC  fpu
 14:      73434          XT-PIC  ide0
 15:      80234          XT-PIC  ide1
NMI:          0
$ cat ioports
0000-001f : dma1
0020-003f : pic1
0040-005f : timer
0060-006f : keyboard
0070-007f : rtc
0080-008f : dma page reg
00a0-00bf : pic2
00c0-00df : dma2
00f0-00ff : fpu
0170-0177 : ide1
01f0-01f7 : ide0
0300-030f : xirc2ps_cs
0376-0376 : ide1
03c0-03df : vga+
03f6-03f6 : ide0
03f8-03ff : serial(auto)
1050-1057 : ide0
1058-105f : ide1
1080-108f : ESS Solo1
10c0-10cf : ESS Solo1
10d4-10df : ESS Solo1
10ec-10ef : ESS Solo1
$ cat dma
 4: cascade
$
Or, more simply, use the lsdev command, which gathers information from these three files and sorts them by peripheral, which is undoubtedly more convenient[1]:

$ lsdev
Device            DMA   IRQ  I/O Ports
------------------------------------------------
cascade             4     2
dma                          0080-008f
dma1                         0000-001f
dma2                         00c0-00df
ESS                          1080-108f 10c0-10cf 10d4-10df 10ec-10ef
fpu                      13  00f0-00ff
ide0                     14  01f0-01f7 03f6-03f6 1050-1057
ide1                     15  0170-0177 0376-0376 1058-105f
keyboard                  1  0060-006f
Mouse                    12
pic1                         0020-003f
pic2                         00a0-00bf
rtc                       8  0070-007f
serial                       03f8-03ff
Solo1                    10
timer                     0  0040-005f
vga+                         03c0-03df
xirc2ps_cs                5  0300-030f
$

An exhaustive listing of files would be too long, but here's the description of some of them:

Notes

[1]

lsdev is part of the procinfo package.


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