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lsvpd: ----- The lsvpd package contains all of the lsvpd, lscfg and lsmcode commands. These commands, along with a scanning program called vpdupdate, constitute a hardware inventory system. The lsvpd command provides Vital Product Data (VPD) about hardware components to higher-level serviceability tools. The lscfg command provides a more human-readable format of the VPD, as well as some system-specific information. lsmcode lists microcode and firmware levels. lsvio lists virtual devices. Source: ------- https://github.com/power-ras/lsvpd License: -------- See 'COPYING' file. Compilation dependencies: ------------------------- - C and C++ compiler (gcc, g++) - GNU build tools (automake, autoconf, libtool, etc) - librtas-devel - libvpd-devel - sg3_utils-devel - zlib-devel Binary dependencies: -------------------- - iprutils - librtas - libvpd - sg3_utils - zlib Note: Package name may differ slightly between Linux distributors. Ex: RedHat and SLES ships development packages as "-devel" while Ubuntu ships it as "-dev" package. Please check your linux distribution package naming convention and make sure you have installed right packages. Building: --------- You can build on Power Linux System. $ ./bootstrap.sh $ ./configure [--prefix=/usr/] $ make $ make install Building rpms: -------------- To build a tarball to feed to rpmbuild, do $ make dist-gzip As an example, we use a command similar to the following: $ rpmbuild -ba [--target=ppc/ppc64] <path-to-spec-file> Reporting issue: ---------------- Create a GitHub issue if you have any request for change, assuming one does not already exist. Clearly describe the issue including steps to reproduce if it is a bug. How to contribute: ------------------ If you plan to submit the changes, submit a pull request based on top of master. Include a descriptive commit message. Changes contributed should focus on a single issue at a time to the extent possible. Hacking: -------- The following workflow should work for you: - Fork the repository on GitHub into your account. - Create a topic branch from where you want to base your work. This is usually the master branch. - Make sure you have added the necessary tests for your changes and make sure all tests pass. - Push your changes to the topic branch in your fork of the repository. - Include a descriptive commit message, and each commit should have linux-kernel style 'Signed-Off-By'. - Submit a pull request to this repository. You probably want to read the linux kernel Documentation/SubmittingPatches as much of it applies to lsvpd. --
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