Gentoo Archives: gentoo-user

From: Andrey Ponomarenko <andrewponomarenko@××××××.ru>
To: "gentoo-user@l.g.o" <gentoo-user@l.g.o>
Subject: Re: [gentoo-user] Gentoo hardware database
Date: Sat, 27 Oct 2018 09:57:10
Message-Id: 14507841540634217@sas1-19a94364928d.qloud-c.yandex.net
In Reply to: Re: [gentoo-user] Gentoo hardware database by Alexey Eschenko
1
Hi, �� Please try: �� �� ��sudo hw-probe -all -upload --log-level=minimal �� Thank you. �� 26.10.2018, 17:36, "Alexey Eschenko" <skobkin-ru@××.ru>:
Is there any way to disable sending some parts of the collected data?�� I've seen some of the last probes and found that there may be some potentially sensitive data. I don't mind to share my configuration with community but I don't want to share some logs, mountpoint data and same other info.

12:27, October 26, 2018, Andrey Ponomarenko <andrewponomarenko@××××××.ru>:

Hi,

The Linux-Hardware.org database has been divided recently into a set of databases, one per each Linux distro. The one for Gentoo is available at:

https://linux-hardware.org/?d=Gentoo

Everyone can contribute to the database with the help of https://github.com/linuxhw/hw-probe (various packages for the tool are available: AppImage, Snap, Flatpak, Docker, ebuild http://gpo.zugaina.org/sys-apps/hw-probe, etc.). The tool is intended to simplify collecting of logs necessary for investigating hardware related problems. You need to execute only one simple command to collect all system logs at once:

��������sudo hw-probe -all -upload

Hardware failures are highlighted in the collected logs (smartctl, dmesg, xorg.log). Also it's handy to search for particular hardware configurations in the community and review logs for errors to check operability of devices on board (for some devices this is done automatically by hw-probe ��� see statuses of devices in a probe).

Enjoy!
��



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