In this section you will learn how to get general systeminformation data. We will also cover the "get" and "get-all" functions to get partial or all data with one single call.
For function reference and examples we assume, that we imported systeminformation as follows:
const si = require('systeminformation');
Lib-Version and Time/Timezone
The first two functions just give back systeminformation library version number and time/timezone information of your machine. These are the only two functions not returning a promise (so they are not async functions):
Function | Result object | Linux | BSD | Mac | Win | Sun | Comments |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
si.version() | : string | X | X | X | X | X | lib version (no callback/promise) |
si.time() | {...} | X | X | X | X | X | object (no callback/promise) with: |
current | X | X | X | X | X | local (server) time | |
uptime | X | X | X | X | X | uptime in number of seconds | |
timezone | X | X | X | X | X | e.g. GMT+0200 | |
timezoneName | X | X | X | X | X | e.g. CEST |
Keep in mind, that there is another function si.versions() that will return versions of other system libraries and software packages
Get Defined Result Object
Normally you would call each of the functions (where you want to get detailed system information) seperately. The docs pages contain a full reference (with examples) for each available function. But there is also another really handy way to get a self-defined result object in one single call:
The si.get() function is an alternative, where you can obtain several system information data in one call. You can define a json object which represents the data structure you are expecting and the si.get() call will then return all of the requested data in a single result object
Function | Result object | Linux | BSD | Mac | Win | Sun | Comments |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
si.get(valueObject,cb) | {...} | X | X | X | X | X | get partial data at once Specify return object for all values that should be returned: |
Example
{ cpu: { manufacturer: 'Intel®', brand: 'Core™ i7-8569U', vendor: 'GenuineIntel', family: '6', model: '142', stepping: '10', revision: '', voltage: '', speed: '2.80', speedmin: '2.80', speedmax: '2.80', governor: '', cores: 8, physicalCores: 4, processors: 1, socket: '', cache: { l1d: 32768, l1i: 32768, l2: 262144, l3: 8388608 } }, osInfo: { platform: 'darwin', release: '10.15.4' }, system: { model: 'MacBookPro15,2', manufacturer: 'Apple Inc.' } } |
The key names of the valueObject must be exactly the same as the representing function within systeminformation.
Providing parameters to the get() function
Now you can also provide parameters to get() functions (where needed). Just pass the parameters in parentheses right after the wanted keys: have a look at the folloging example:
Function | Result object | Linux | BSD | Mac | Win | Sun | Comments |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
si.get(valueObject,cb) | {...} | X | X | X | X | X | example with parameters: value in paretheses goes as parameter to the given function: |
Example
{ processLoad: { pids: [ 640, 643, 654, 655, 656, 657, 658, 659 ], cpu: 0.63 } } |
Get All At Once
The following three functions si.getStaticData(), si.getDynamicData() and si.getAllData() will return most of the available data in a single result object:
Function | Result object | Linux | BSD | Mac | Win | Sun | Comments |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
si.getStaticData(cb) | {...} | X | X | X | X | X | all static data at once |
si.getDynamicData(srv,iface,cb) | {...} | X | X | X | X | X | all dynamic data at once Specify services and interfaces to monitor Defaults to first external network interface Pass "*" for ALL services (linux/win only) Pass "*" for ALL network interfaces |
si.getAllData(srv,iface,cb) | {...} | X | X | X | X | X | all data at once Specify services and interfaces to monitor Defaults to first external network interface Pass "*" for ALL services (linux/win only) Pass "*" for ALL network interfaces |
Static data is all hardware related (or more or less constant) data like system, baseboard, bios, OS, versions, cpu, network interfces, memory and disk layout
Dynamic data will return user, cpu-speed, load, processes, services, temperature, file system, network and disk stats, ...
As not all funtions are supported in each operating system the result object might be different in each OS.
ATTENTION: Use this only if you really need ALL information. Especially on Windows this can take really long (up to 20 seconds) because the underlying WMIC command is very slow when using it the first time.