You might require the serial number of your computer for several reasons. The serial number is commonly needed when you require service or support of any kind. There are various methods by which you can find the serial number of your computer. These options vary from desktops, notebooks, workstations and tablets. Here are the common ways you can apply for finding out your computer’s serial number. Command prompt for Windows For using this method, you have to type a command in Windows for getting the serial number.
In Windows, you have to search for CMD.EXE and open the file. A command window will open up. At the command prompt, you should type “wmic bios” (without quotes) and press the Enter key. The serial number along with other important information will be displayed on the screen. If you want to display only serial number of your computer, use the following command: wmic bios get serialnumber To get the model number, you should run the following command: wmic csproduct get name The following command will show the computer serial number and model number: wmic csproduct get name, identifyingnumber You may also require to see the support information. For this, you need to press the control key and the shift key together and you will be able to get the system information in the case of desktops. Notebooks In order to find the computer serial number and system information in notebooks, you have to press the F9 and Escape key from the inbuilt keyboard of the notebook.
Dec 13, 2018 - Method 1: Obtain the Card Serial Number Using a Command. Run the display elabel command to view electronic label information, and select the slot ID according to the command prompt information. In the command output, BarCode specifies the serial number of a card. The command format may vary according to the version.
You will find the serial number displayed at the bottom side of the window. Windows 8 For Windows 8, you will be able to find the computer serial number by going to Computer and selecting the system information tab. Here the serial number will be displayed. Windows XP For Windows XP, the computer serial number can be easily found out in two ways. First, you can try the command prompt option for deriving the serial number and in case that fails, you simply have to go to My Computer and find out the serial number in the system information section. System information during the startup of your computer You can get the serial number of your computer in another easy way. This can be done when you are turning on your computer.
First, you should turn off your computer in case you already had it on. After this you should restart and press the F1 key just after the computer starts off. After pressing the F1 key, the serial number will get displayed on the information screen.
BIOS system information You can obtain your computer’s serial number in BIOS by following some simple steps. If your computer is running, you need to switch it off. Turn it on again and press the F10 key immediately after the computer boots.
An information page will be displayed where you will find the serial number listed. Sometimes, a menu may also be displayed. In this case, you should choose the information page or the system information option under the main tab or the file.
As a result, the computer’s serial number will be displayed on the information screen. Finding your computer’s serial number is a simple task which can be carried out in several ways which are simple for anyone to use. The serial number may be required for several security and support purposes.
Make a Telnet ( when enabled or via the console cable ) a connection the the switch. Type the admin information and when entered a Password ( default no password ) To enable the secret command line commands: you have to type the following command: cmdline-mode on And press enter. You will get a question. Answer this question with Yes. If you don’t have a password you will get a popup notification on the CLI Type the code 512900 You get the User View commands if you press??
You’re not going to like this, but you can’t. I took on the management of a number of v1910’s and saw one that had was stuck on old firmware. Tried updating it and noticed that it refused to work beyond the same firmware level you mentioned.
I finally came to the conclusion that my predecessor had been ‘tinkering’ and very likely did the same thing via the secret CLI menu’s. The problem is that since there is a shared platform between 3com/HP/H3C, they used similar firmware. But when the design of later models began to diverge, HP removed a feature from their own firmware that would undo the change made to the Device ID. So you’re stuck. There is an HP note on this somewhere out there and the purpose that command was designed for. What it doesn’t say is how to fix it if used on a later HP device.
This may shed more light on the subject: I ended up having to RMA the device after asking HP nicely. OP – please consider adding a warning to the blog that alerts people to this problem.
Are you on the newest firmware? It works for me after following your instructions and getting into the system view. Several commands that start with an underscore are unlocked plus others. cmdline-mode on All commands can be displayed and executed. Y/NY Please input password:.
Warning: Now you enter an all-command mode for developer’s testing, some commands may affect operation by wrong use, please carefully use it with our engineer’s direction. System System View: return to User View with Ctrl+Z. 24Ghidecmd Now you enter a hidden command view for developer’s testing, some commands may affect operation by wrong use, please carefully use it with our engineer’s direction. I currently have 4 1950’s in an IRF stack and would love the CLI password, The switch is currently missing a lot of settings in the WebUI (i.e SNMP config for IMC). This could be resolved quickly with the CLI password. I logged a call with HP support and they would not release this information they instead told me to wait until December for a firmware update which will add snmp to the WebUI! Quite frankly this is shocking:( Below is the output when trying to access the CLI mode.?
It has worked on my 1950’s, but I don’t spefically have the JG960A, I have a 24 port poe, 48 port poe, and a couple of the 48 port non poe units. Works for all of them. The other one HP told me to try was agnipath1950unauthorized if the foes didn’t work. If neither work and you are certain you are typing them exact call and open a ticket, the way to get the password is tell them you have to have SNMP enabled. Level 1 will take a day scratching their heads before they send to level 2, level 2 will want on your system but then they’ll tell you the password. At least that’s how I did it. You can make a vlan trunk to both switches.
– hp trunk or lacp ( avoid in this case lacp ) – hp untag 1 native ( vlan 1 default) and other vlans you need to tag to the trunk – cisco make a trunk poort – cisco tag all vlan’s to the trunk port. – you can reset the password by using a hack on the boot. – there is no default ip address. It will receive an IP via the DHCP or you have to configure it. – you can use best a tool like netscan to find your switch and select it on mac address. – in the Dhcp it’s most of the time the last IP address which is taken. Or you have to know the mac address of the device to look it up in the DCHP.
I hope it will help you –. Hi, I would like to have two VLANs on my switch hp 1920-48, which get ip address from DHCP server. VLAN1 get address from DHCP from network 10.113.0.0 255.255.0.0 VLAN10 get address from DHCP from network 172.16.1.0 255.255.255.0 I have already made two scopes on DHCP server, and I also have done some configurations for all this, but now I’m stuck here.