X-Git-Url: http://git.steven-mcdonald.id.au/?p=www.git;a=blobdiff_plain;f=projects%2Fopenbsd_devtree.shtml;fp=projects%2Fopenbsd_devtree.shtml;h=6bb4d1c8e108617ead1ec88207b5970d43d0d2fb;hp=3eb7c7317d3327ede831a341db46873f45395e2c;hb=c44304e820bc8495b5ef98bdb7ac868cdc065b67;hpb=bb35d1ecd698015eb0819940be72b98a927d96c3 diff --git a/projects/openbsd_devtree.shtml b/projects/openbsd_devtree.shtml index 3eb7c73..6bb4d1c 100644 --- a/projects/openbsd_devtree.shtml +++ b/projects/openbsd_devtree.shtml @@ -14,11 +14,11 @@

Printing device trees on OpenBSD

-I've written a small Perl utility that takes dmesg output on -standard input and produces a human-friendly tree of devices on -standard output. Since it accepts any dmesg output, you can -use it to produce a tree of hardware on someone else's system as well -as examine your own. +I've written a small Perl utility for OpenBSD that takes dmesg +output on standard input and produces a human-friendly tree of devices +on standard output. Since it accepts any (OpenBSD) dmesg +output, you can use it to produce a tree of hardware on someone else's +system as well as examine your own.

As an example, this is what it looks like on my Lemote Yeeloong: