sherline@john-desktop:~$ sudo lspci -vv lspci.txt [sudo] password for sherline: Sorry, try again. [sudo] password for sherline: Usage: lspci [] Basic display modes: -mm Produce machine-readable output (single -m for an obsolete format) -t Show bus tree Display options: -v Be verbose (-vv for very verbose) -k Show kernel drivers handling each device -x Show hex-dump of the standard part of the config space -xxx Show hex-dump of the whole config space (dangerous; root only) -xxxx Show hex-dump of the 4096-byte extended config space (root only) -b Bus-centric view (addresses and IRQ's as seen by the bus) -D Always show domain numbers Resolving of device ID's to names: -n Show numeric ID's -nn Show both textual and numeric ID's (names & numbers) -q Query the PCI ID database for unknown ID's via DNS -qq As above, but re-query locally cached entries -Q Query the PCI ID database for all ID's via DNS Selection of devices: -s [[[[]:]]:][][.[]] Show only devices in selected slots -d []:[] Show only devices with specified ID's Other options: -i Use specified ID database instead of /usr/share/misc/pci.ids.gz -p Look up kernel modules in a given file instead of default modules.pcimap -M Enable `bus mapping' mode (dangerous; root only) PCI access options: -A Use the specified PCI access method (see `-A help' for a list) -O = Set PCI access parameter (see `-O help' for a list) -G Enable PCI access debugging -H Use direct hardware access ( = 1 or 2) -F Read PCI configuration dump from a given file sherline@john-desktop:~$