The report below should give back the information that you are after. Do note that Lansweeper does not scan whether a software is 32 or 64 bit. We gave back the architecture of the processor in the report in the hopes that this may help.
Instructions for adding this report to your Lansweeper installation can be found
here. If you are interested in building or modifying reports, we do recommend:
- Reviewing some SQL tutorials, as the Lansweeper report builder is a standard SQL editor. If you know SQL, you know how to build Lansweeper reports as well. This seems like a good tutorial.
- Making use of our database dictionary, which explains in great detail what each database table and field stores. More information on the dictionary can be found here.
Select Top 1000000 tblAssets.AssetID,
tblAssets.AssetName,
tsysAssetTypes.AssetTypename,
tsysAssetTypes.AssetTypeIcon10 As icon,
tblAssets.IPAddress,
tsysOS.OSname As OS,
tblAssetCustom.Model,
Cast(tblProcessor.AddressWidth As nvarchar) + ' bit' As [CPU Architecture],
tblAssets.Lastseen,
tblAssets.Lasttried
From tblAssets
Inner Join tblAssetCustom On tblAssets.AssetID = tblAssetCustom.AssetID
Inner Join tsysAssetTypes On tsysAssetTypes.AssetType = tblAssets.Assettype
Inner Join tsysOS On tblAssets.OScode = tsysOS.OScode
Inner Join tblProcessor On tblAssets.AssetID = tblProcessor.AssetID
Where (tsysOS.OSname = 'Win 7' Or tsysOS.OSname = 'Win 10') And
tblAssetCustom.Model = 'TECRA Z40-A' And tblAssetCustom.State = 1