version(1)version(1)NAMEversion - display version identification of object file or binary
SYNOPSISversion filename [filename filename ... ]
version-p command [ command command ... ]
DESCRIPTION
The version command displays the version of the named file(s).
USAGE
Type: version filename
Or: version-p command
filename (or a list of file names) is either a full path to a file
starting with /, or a relative path starting from the current
directory.
Alternatively, use the -p option to search the current $PATH for
command (or a list of commands) and display it's version string.
You can also use the cc, CC, and f95 compiler's -V option to display
directly the version ID of the various executables that operate during
a compilation session.
EXAMPLES
In the following examples, path must give the full pathname to the
file(s).
version /path/f95 /path/prod/iropt
Or use the -p option to find a command on the current $PATH:
version-p cc CC f95 dbx
NOTES
The version command seeks and displays any string of ASCII characters
following the @(#)RELEASE VERSION string. This string should be in a
#pragma ident, for example:
#pragma ident @(#)RELEASE VERSION 8.2
The version information string following this version-key string can be
any sequence of printable characters terminated by a NEWLINE or NULL.
To see a list of the Oracle Solaris Studio components installed on your
system, use the package command that is appropriate for your system.
For example, to see which package contains the cc binary use commands
like this:
On Solaris 10 : pkgchk -l -p /path/to/.../bin/cc
On Solaris 11 : pkg search -lp /path/to/.../bin/cc
On Linux : rpm -qf /path/to/.../bin/cc
To see which Oracle Solaris Studio packages are installed on the
system:
On Solaris 10 : pkginfo | grep SPRO
On Solaris 11 : pkg list | grep -i studio
On Linux : rpm -qa | grep solstudio | head
November 2011 version(1)