CPU: Info
Revision as of 08:57, 3 January 2020 by Onnowpurbo (talk | contribs)
lscpu
sudo lscpu
cat /proc/cpuinfo
cat /proc/cpuinfo
cat /proc/cpuinfo | grep 'vendor' | uniq #view vendor name cat /proc/cpuinfo | grep 'model name' | uniq #display model name cat /proc/cpuinfo | grep processor | wc -l #count the number of processing units cat /proc/cpuinfo | grep 'core id' #show individual cores
cpuid
cpuid
dmidecode
sudo dmidecode --type processor
inxi
inxi -C
lshw -c CPU
sudo lshw -C CPU
hardinfo
hardinfo
hwinfo
hwinfo --cpu
nproc
nproc
CoreFreq
sudo apt-get install dkms git libpthread-stubs0-dev [On Debian/Ubuntu]
Next clone the CoreFreq source code from the Github repository, move into the download folder and compile and build the program:
git clone https://github.com/cyring/CoreFreq.git cd CoreFreq make
sudo insmod corefreqk.ko sudo ./corefreqd
Then, start the client, as a user.
./corefreq-cli
$ ./corefreq-cli -h
CoreFreq Options CoreFreq. Copyright (C) 2015-2017 CYRIL INGENIERIE usage: corefreq-cli [-option <arguments>] -t Show Top (default) -d Show Dashboard arguments: <left> <top> <marginWidth> <marginHeight> -c Monitor Counters -i Monitor Instructions -s Print System Information -M Print Memory Controller -m Print Topology -u Print CPUID -k Print Kernel -h Print out this message Exit status: 0 if OK, 1 if problems, >1 if serious trouble.
Report bugs to labs[at]cyring.fr
To print info about the kernel, run:
$ ./corefreq-cli -k
Print CPU identification details:
$ ./corefreq-cli -u
You can as well monitor CPU instructions in real-time:
$ ./corefreq-cli -i
Enable tracing of counters as below:
$ ./corefreq-cli -c