Re: Re: Any way to tell what the RAM configuration is?

2006-12-06 Thread patrick
Awesome, that works like a charm! Thanks, Patrick On 12/6/06, Chuck Swiger <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: On Dec 6, 2006, at 11:00 AM, patrick wrote: > I'm wondering if there's any way in FreeBSD (4.x on i386) to tell what > the RAM configuration in the system is? ie. Can it show me if I have > fo

Re: Any way to tell what the RAM configuration is?

2006-12-06 Thread Josh Carroll
Sure. Install the dmidecode port (from /usr/ports/sysutils/ dmidecode), and run: dmidecode -t memory Of course, this relies on the BIOS reporting the memory properly. In my case, on an Asus P5B motherboard, it reports the RAM at 533 MHz (DDR2-533), even though it's set in the BIOS to run at

Re: Any way to tell what the RAM configuration is?

2006-12-06 Thread Vince Hoffman
patrick wrote: I'm wondering if there's any way in FreeBSD (4.x on i386) to tell what the RAM configuration in the system is? ie. Can it show me if I have four 256MB modules versus two 512MB's? Obviously it would be possible to just open up the computer and see for my self, I'm hoping I can save

Re: Any way to tell what the RAM configuration is?

2006-12-06 Thread Chuck Swiger
On Dec 6, 2006, at 11:00 AM, patrick wrote: I'm wondering if there's any way in FreeBSD (4.x on i386) to tell what the RAM configuration in the system is? ie. Can it show me if I have four 256MB modules versus two 512MB's? Obviously it would be possible to just open up the computer and see for my

Any way to tell what the RAM configuration is?

2006-12-06 Thread patrick
I'm wondering if there's any way in FreeBSD (4.x on i386) to tell what the RAM configuration in the system is? ie. Can it show me if I have four 256MB modules versus two 512MB's? Obviously it would be possible to just open up the computer and see for my self, I'm hoping I can save myself a trip an