/usr/sbin/lsdahdi is in dahdi 1:2.11.1-2.
This file is owned by root:root, with mode 0o755.
The actual contents of the file can be viewed below.
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 100 101 102 103 104 105 106 107 108 109 110 | #! /usr/bin/perl -w
#
# Written by Oron Peled <oron@actcom.co.il>
# Copyright (C) 2007, Xorcom
# This program is free software; you can redistribute and/or
# modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.
#
# $Id$
#
use strict;
use File::Basename;
BEGIN { my $dir = dirname($0); unshift(@INC, "$dir", "$dir/perl_modules"); }
use Dahdi;
use Dahdi::Span;
use Dahdi::Xpp;
use Dahdi::Xpp::Xbus;
use Dahdi::Xpp::Xpd;
my @xbuses = Dahdi::Xpp::xbuses;
my @xpds = map { $_->xpds } @xbuses;
foreach my $span (Dahdi::spans()) {
my $spanno = $span->num;
my $xpd = Dahdi::Xpp::xpd_of_span($span);
my @lines;
my $index = 0;
@lines = @{$xpd->lines} if defined $xpd;
printf "### Span %2d: %s %s\n", $span->num, $span->name, $span->description;
foreach my $chan ($span->chans()) {
my %type_map = (
OUT => 'Output',
IN => 'Input'
);
my ($type) = map { $type_map{$_} or $_ } $chan->type || ("unknown");
my $batt = "";
$batt = "(battery)" if $chan->battery;
my @alarms = $chan->alarms;
my $alarm_str = join(" ", @alarms);
printf "%3d %-10s %-10s %s %s %s\n",
$chan->num, $type, $chan->signalling, $chan->info, $batt, $alarm_str;
$index++;
}
}
__END__
=head1 NAME
lsdahdi - List all Dahdi channels with their types and spans.
=head1 SYNOPSIS
lsdahdi
=head1 DESCRIPTION
Example output:
### Span 1: WCTDM/0 "Wildcard TDM400P REV E/F Board 1"
1 FXO FXOLS (In use)
2 FXS FXSKS
3 FXS FXSKS
4 FXS FXSKS
### Span 2: XBUS-00/XPD-00 "Xorcom XPD #00/00: FXO"
5 FXO FXSKS (In use)
6 FXO FXSKS (In use) (no pcm)
7 FXO FXSKS (In use) (no pcm)
8 FXO FXSKS (In use) (no pcm)
9 FXO FXSKS (In use) (no pcm)
10 FXO FXSKS (In use) (no pcm)
11 FXO FXSKS (In use) (no pcm)
12 FXO FXSKS (In use) (no pcm)
### Span 3: XBUS-00/XPD-10 "Xorcom XPD #00/10: FXO"
13 FXO FXSKS (In use) (no pcm)
14 FXO FXSKS (In use) (no pcm)
15 FXO FXSKS (In use) (no pcm)
16 FXO FXSKS (In use) (no pcm)
17 FXO FXSKS (In use) (no pcm)
18 FXO FXSKS (In use) (no pcm)
19 FXO FXSKS (In use) (no pcm)
20 FXO FXSKS (In use) (no pcm)
...
### Span 6: XBUS-01/XPD-00 "Xorcom XPD #01/00: FXS"
37 FXS FXOLS (In use)
38 FXS FXOLS (In use) (no pcm)
39 FXS FXOLS (In use) (no pcm)
40 FXS FXOLS (In use) (no pcm)
41 FXS FXOLS (In use) (no pcm)
42 FXS FXOLS (In use) (no pcm)
43 FXS FXOLS (In use) (no pcm)
44 FXS FXOLS (In use) (no pcm)
45 Output FXOLS (In use) (no pcm)
46 Output FXOLS (In use) (no pcm)
47 Input FXOLS (In use) (no pcm)
48 Input FXOLS (In use) (no pcm)
49 Input FXOLS (In use) (no pcm)
50 Input FXOLS (In use) (no pcm)
The first column is the type of the channel (port, for an analog device)
and the second one is the signalling (if set).
=head1 FILES
lsdahdi is a somewhat glorified 'cat /proc/dahdi/*' . Unlike that
command, it sorts the spans with the proper order. It also formats the
output slightly differently.
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