Find total physical memory on computer, .NET core 2.1, c#, Ubuntu
How do I find the total available physical memory on a computer specifically running Ubuntu and .NET core? Most solutions work only on full .NET and the following .NET core code snippet --
ManagementClass mc = new ManagementClass ("Win32_ComputerSystem");
ManagementObjectCollection moc = mc.GetInstances();
foreach (ManagementObject item in moc)
m1 = Convert.ToUInt64(item.Properties["TotalPhysicalMemory"].Value);
works properly on Windows but returns 0 on non-Windows systems.
c# linux .net-core
add a comment |
How do I find the total available physical memory on a computer specifically running Ubuntu and .NET core? Most solutions work only on full .NET and the following .NET core code snippet --
ManagementClass mc = new ManagementClass ("Win32_ComputerSystem");
ManagementObjectCollection moc = mc.GetInstances();
foreach (ManagementObject item in moc)
m1 = Convert.ToUInt64(item.Properties["TotalPhysicalMemory"].Value);
works properly on Windows but returns 0 on non-Windows systems.
c# linux .net-core
WMI
(Windows Management Instrumentation) queries are available in Windows only (a similar CIM implementation is at an early stage in some Linux distributions). You are calling a stub.
– Jimi
Nov 12 at 20:55
add a comment |
How do I find the total available physical memory on a computer specifically running Ubuntu and .NET core? Most solutions work only on full .NET and the following .NET core code snippet --
ManagementClass mc = new ManagementClass ("Win32_ComputerSystem");
ManagementObjectCollection moc = mc.GetInstances();
foreach (ManagementObject item in moc)
m1 = Convert.ToUInt64(item.Properties["TotalPhysicalMemory"].Value);
works properly on Windows but returns 0 on non-Windows systems.
c# linux .net-core
How do I find the total available physical memory on a computer specifically running Ubuntu and .NET core? Most solutions work only on full .NET and the following .NET core code snippet --
ManagementClass mc = new ManagementClass ("Win32_ComputerSystem");
ManagementObjectCollection moc = mc.GetInstances();
foreach (ManagementObject item in moc)
m1 = Convert.ToUInt64(item.Properties["TotalPhysicalMemory"].Value);
works properly on Windows but returns 0 on non-Windows systems.
c# linux .net-core
c# linux .net-core
asked Nov 12 at 20:12
lhs
132
132
WMI
(Windows Management Instrumentation) queries are available in Windows only (a similar CIM implementation is at an early stage in some Linux distributions). You are calling a stub.
– Jimi
Nov 12 at 20:55
add a comment |
WMI
(Windows Management Instrumentation) queries are available in Windows only (a similar CIM implementation is at an early stage in some Linux distributions). You are calling a stub.
– Jimi
Nov 12 at 20:55
WMI
(Windows Management Instrumentation) queries are available in Windows only (a similar CIM implementation is at an early stage in some Linux distributions). You are calling a stub.– Jimi
Nov 12 at 20:55
WMI
(Windows Management Instrumentation) queries are available in Windows only (a similar CIM implementation is at an early stage in some Linux distributions). You are calling a stub.– Jimi
Nov 12 at 20:55
add a comment |
1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
Currently you can't get Hardware information on all Platforms, this is also mentioned in this issue: https://github.com/dotnet/corefx/issues/22660
I think since .NET Core 2.1 you can use Process class to get process memory, as mentioned in this issue: https://github.com/dotnet/corefx/issues/26669
As an alternative, on Linux you could always access HW and OS information from files in /proc, for memory there is /proc/meminfo
There you get MemTotal, MemFree and a lot of other information.
However this approach requires some file parsing.
add a comment |
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1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
Currently you can't get Hardware information on all Platforms, this is also mentioned in this issue: https://github.com/dotnet/corefx/issues/22660
I think since .NET Core 2.1 you can use Process class to get process memory, as mentioned in this issue: https://github.com/dotnet/corefx/issues/26669
As an alternative, on Linux you could always access HW and OS information from files in /proc, for memory there is /proc/meminfo
There you get MemTotal, MemFree and a lot of other information.
However this approach requires some file parsing.
add a comment |
Currently you can't get Hardware information on all Platforms, this is also mentioned in this issue: https://github.com/dotnet/corefx/issues/22660
I think since .NET Core 2.1 you can use Process class to get process memory, as mentioned in this issue: https://github.com/dotnet/corefx/issues/26669
As an alternative, on Linux you could always access HW and OS information from files in /proc, for memory there is /proc/meminfo
There you get MemTotal, MemFree and a lot of other information.
However this approach requires some file parsing.
add a comment |
Currently you can't get Hardware information on all Platforms, this is also mentioned in this issue: https://github.com/dotnet/corefx/issues/22660
I think since .NET Core 2.1 you can use Process class to get process memory, as mentioned in this issue: https://github.com/dotnet/corefx/issues/26669
As an alternative, on Linux you could always access HW and OS information from files in /proc, for memory there is /proc/meminfo
There you get MemTotal, MemFree and a lot of other information.
However this approach requires some file parsing.
Currently you can't get Hardware information on all Platforms, this is also mentioned in this issue: https://github.com/dotnet/corefx/issues/22660
I think since .NET Core 2.1 you can use Process class to get process memory, as mentioned in this issue: https://github.com/dotnet/corefx/issues/26669
As an alternative, on Linux you could always access HW and OS information from files in /proc, for memory there is /proc/meminfo
There you get MemTotal, MemFree and a lot of other information.
However this approach requires some file parsing.
answered Nov 12 at 20:55
hiiru
162
162
add a comment |
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WMI
(Windows Management Instrumentation) queries are available in Windows only (a similar CIM implementation is at an early stage in some Linux distributions). You are calling a stub.– Jimi
Nov 12 at 20:55