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a small C library for x86 CPU detection and feature extraction
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Veselin Georgiev 14d6a9d875 Fix cpu_clock_by_ic() for Skylake (it was 1.6 times too high).
The reason and fix is similar to what we did previously for Bulldozer.
2016-05-19 01:37:45 +03:00
contrib/MSR Driver
cpuid_tool Update cpuid_tool to print the new supported MSR info. 2015-10-16 03:07:55 +03:00
debian Address lintian warnings/errors. Fixes issue #16. 2015-04-21 12:23:51 -04:00
libcpuid Fix cpu_clock_by_ic() for Skylake (it was 1.6 times too high). 2016-05-19 01:37:45 +03:00
tests Support for Skylake. 2016-05-19 01:37:45 +03:00
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AUTHORS
ChangeLog Bump the version to 0.2.2 (and briefly describe changes since 2012). 2015-11-04 01:31:22 +02:00
configure.ac Bump the version to 0.2.2 (and briefly describe changes since 2012). 2015-11-04 01:31:22 +02:00
COPYING
libcpuid.dsw
libcpuid.pc.in
libcpuid_vc9.sln
libcpuid_vc71.sln
Makefile.am Fix 'make test' failing without any really wrong tests. 2016-03-10 02:44:17 +02:00
NEWS
README Convert README to markdown. 2015-11-04 01:31:23 +02:00
Readme.md Update Readme.md with details about testing. 2016-04-19 13:38:41 +03:00

libcpuid

libcpuid provides CPU identification for the x86 (and x86_64). For details about the programming API, please see the docs on the project's site (http://libcpuid.sourceforge.net/)

Configuring after checkout

Under linux, where you download the sources, there's no configure script to run. This is because it isn't a good practice to keep such scripts in a source control system. To create it, you need to run the following commands once, after you checkout the libcpuid sources from github:

    1. run "libtoolize"
    2. run "autoreconf --install"

You need to have autoconf, automake and libtool installed.

After that you can run ./configure and make - this will build the library.

make dist will create a tarball (with "configure" inside) with the sources.

Testing

After any change to the detection routines or match tables, it's always a good idea to run make test. If some test fails, and you're confident that the test is wrong and needs fixing, run make fix-tests.

You can also add a new test (which is basically a file containing the raw CPUID data and the expected decoded items) by using tests/create_test.py. The workflow there is as follows:

  1. Run "cpuid_tool" with no arguments. It will tell you that it has written a pair of files, raw.txt and report.txt. Ensure that report.txt contains meaningful data.
  2. Run "tests/create_test.py raw.txt report.txt > «my-cpu».test"
  3. Use a proper descriptive name for the test (look into tests/amd and tests/intel to get an idea) and copy your test file to an appropriate place within the tests directory hierarchy.

For non-developers, who still want to contribute tests for the project, use this page to report misdetections or new CPUs that libcpuid doesn't handle well yet.

Users

So far, I'm aware of the following projects which utilize libcpuid:

We'd love to hear from you if you are also using libcpuid and want your project listed above.