Difference between revisions of "Dell Service Tag"

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[[Category:Engineering]]
 
[[Category:Engineering]]
  
You can get the '''Dell Service Tag''' from a machine remotely. You don't have to look up Service Tag from an inventory list and you don't have to go try to read the number off the tiny sticker. It turns out that Dell puts the Service Code into BIOS. You can query the BIOS for the Service Tag.
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In order to talk to Dell about equipment you bought from them you need the ```Dell Service Tag``` which is a 7-character string of capital letters and numbers that is printed on a tiny brown sticker somewhere on the front or back of the machine. This can be a pain in the ass if you didn't realize how critical this number is and did not include it in your inventory list of your servers. Luckily, you can get the '''Dell Service Tag''' from a machine remotely. It turns out that Dell puts the Service Tag in the BIOS. so you can query the BIOS for the Service Tag. This can be done without rebooting from the command-line of both Linux and Windows.
  
 
== Linux ==
 
== Linux ==

Revision as of 17:17, 22 August 2008


In order to talk to Dell about equipment you bought from them you need the ```Dell Service Tag``` which is a 7-character string of capital letters and numbers that is printed on a tiny brown sticker somewhere on the front or back of the machine. This can be a pain in the ass if you didn't realize how critical this number is and did not include it in your inventory list of your servers. Luckily, you can get the Dell Service Tag from a machine remotely. It turns out that Dell puts the Service Tag in the BIOS. so you can query the BIOS for the Service Tag. This can be done without rebooting from the command-line of both Linux and Windows.

Linux

dmidecode -s system-serial-number
2M1XDB1

Some systems such as Red Hat and CentOS don't support the '-s' option so these system may need to do something a little tricky (it will probably print twice):

dmidecode | grep --extended-regexp Serial[[:space:]]Number:[[:space:]]*[A-Z0-9]{7}$
                Serial Number: 2M1XDB1
                Serial Number: 2M1XDB1

Windows

In Windows you can use a tiny VBScript to query the WMI for the Service Tag.

Save this script as `service_tag.vbs`:

If WScript.Arguments.Count = 0 Then
    Wscript.Echo "Usage: GetDesllSvcTag.vbs computer1 [computer2] [computer3] ......"
    WScript.Quit
End If
For Each strComputer In wscript.Arguments
    Set objWMIService = GetObject("winmgmts:" & "{impersonationLevel=impersonate}!\\" & strComputer & "\root\cimv2")
    Set colSMBIOS = objWMIService.ExecQuery ("Select * from Win32_SystemEnclosure")
    For Each objSMBIOS in colSMBIOS
        Wscript.Echo strComputer & ": " & objSMBIOS.SerialNumber
    Next
Next 

Start up a Command Prompt (cmd.exe) and run the `service_tag.vbs` script to get something like this:

C:\Documents and Settings\Administrator\Desktop>service_tag.vbs 127.0.0.1
127.0.0.1: 2M1XDB1