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886 lines
36 KiB
C++
886 lines
36 KiB
C++
/*
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* Copyright 2008 Veselin Georgiev,
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* anrieffNOSPAM @ mgail_DOT.com (convert to gmail)
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*
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* Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without
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* modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions
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* are met:
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*
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* 1. Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright
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* notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer.
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* 2. Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright
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* notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the
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* documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution.
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*
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* THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE AUTHOR ``AS IS'' AND ANY EXPRESS OR
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* IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES
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* OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE ARE DISCLAIMED.
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* IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHOR BE LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT,
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* INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT
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* NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE,
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* DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY
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* THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT
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* (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE OF
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* THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE.
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*/
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#ifndef __LIBCPUID_H__
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#define __LIBCPUID_H__
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/**
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* @File libcpuid.h
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* @Author Veselin Georgiev
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* @Date Oct 2008
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* @Version 0.2.1
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*
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* Version history:
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*
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* 0.1.0 (2008-10-15): initial adaptation from wxfractgui sources
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* 0.1.1 (2009-07-06): Added intel_fn11 fields to cpu_raw_data_t to handle
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* new processor topology enumeration required on Core i7
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* 0.1.2 (2009-09-26): Added support for MSR reading through self-extracting
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* kernel driver on Win32.
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* 0.1.3 (2010-04-20): Added support for greater more accurate CPU clock
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* measurements with cpu_clock_by_ic()
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* 0.2.0 (2011-10-11): Support for AMD Bulldozer CPUs, 128-bit SSE unit size
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* checking. A backwards-incompatible change, since the
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* sizeof cpu_id_t is now different.
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* 0.2.1 (2012-05-26): Support for Ivy Bridge, and detecting the presence of
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* the RdRand instruction.
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*/
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/** @mainpage A simple libcpuid introduction
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*
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* LibCPUID provides CPU identification and access to the CPUID and RDTSC
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* instructions on the x86.
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* <p>
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* To execute CPUID, use \ref cpu_exec_cpuid <br>
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* To execute RDTSC, use \ref cpu_rdtsc <br>
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* To fetch the CPUID info needed for CPU identification, use
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* \ref cpuid_get_raw_data <br>
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* To make sense of that data (decode, extract features), use \ref cpu_identify <br>
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* </p>
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*/
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/** @defgroup libcpuid LibCPUID
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@{ */
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/* Include some integer type specifications: */
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#include "libcpuid_types.h"
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/* Some limits and other constants */
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#include "libcpuid_constants.h"
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#ifdef __cplusplus
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extern "C" {
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#endif
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/**
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* @brief CPU vendor, as guessed from the Vendor String.
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*/
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typedef enum {
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VENDOR_INTEL = 0, /*!< Intel CPU */
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VENDOR_AMD, /*!< AMD CPU */
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VENDOR_CYRIX, /*!< Cyrix CPU */
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VENDOR_NEXGEN, /*!< NexGen CPU */
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VENDOR_TRANSMETA, /*!< Transmeta CPU */
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VENDOR_UMC, /*!< x86 CPU by UMC */
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VENDOR_CENTAUR, /*!< x86 CPU by IDT */
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VENDOR_RISE, /*!< x86 CPU by Rise Technology */
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VENDOR_SIS, /*!< x86 CPU by SiS */
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VENDOR_NSC, /*!< x86 CPU by National Semiconductor */
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NUM_CPU_VENDORS, /*!< Valid CPU vendor ids: 0..NUM_CPU_VENDORS - 1 */
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VENDOR_UNKNOWN = -1,
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} cpu_vendor_t;
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#define NUM_CPU_VENDORS NUM_CPU_VENDORS
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/**
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* @brief Contains just the raw CPUID data.
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*
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* This contains only the most basic CPU data, required to do identification
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* and feature recognition. Every processor should be identifiable using this
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* data only.
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*/
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struct cpu_raw_data_t {
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/** contains results of CPUID for eax = 0, 1, ...*/
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uint32_t basic_cpuid[MAX_CPUID_LEVEL][4];
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/** contains results of CPUID for eax = 0x80000000, 0x80000001, ...*/
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uint32_t ext_cpuid[MAX_EXT_CPUID_LEVEL][4];
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/** when the CPU is intel and it supports deterministic cache
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information: this contains the results of CPUID for eax = 4
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and ecx = 0, 1, ... */
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uint32_t intel_fn4[MAX_INTELFN4_LEVEL][4];
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/** when the CPU is intel and it supports leaf 0Bh (Extended Topology
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enumeration leaf), this stores the result of CPUID with
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eax = 11 and ecx = 0, 1, 2... */
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uint32_t intel_fn11[MAX_INTELFN11_LEVEL][4];
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};
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/**
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* @brief This contains the recognized CPU features/info
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*/
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struct cpu_id_t {
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/** contains the CPU vendor string, e.g. "GenuineIntel" */
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char vendor_str[VENDOR_STR_MAX];
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/** contains the brand string, e.g. "Intel(R) Xeon(TM) CPU 2.40GHz" */
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char brand_str[BRAND_STR_MAX];
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/** contains the recognized CPU vendor */
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cpu_vendor_t vendor;
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/**
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* contain CPU flags. Used to test for features. See
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* the CPU_FEATURE_* macros below. @see Features
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*/
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uint8_t flags[CPU_FLAGS_MAX];
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/** CPU family */
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int32_t family;
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/** CPU model */
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int32_t model;
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/** CPU stepping */
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int32_t stepping;
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/** CPU extended family */
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int32_t ext_family;
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/** CPU extended model */
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int32_t ext_model;
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/** Number of CPU cores on the current processor */
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int32_t num_cores;
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/**
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* Number of logical processors on the current processor.
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* Could be more than the number of physical cores,
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* e.g. when the processor has HyperThreading.
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*/
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int32_t num_logical_cpus;
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/**
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* The total number of logical processors.
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*
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* This is num_logical_cpus * {total physical processors in the system}
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*
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* If you're writing a multithreaded program and you want to run it on
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* all CPUs, this is the number of threads you need.
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*/
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int32_t total_logical_cpus;
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/**
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* L1 data cache size in KB. Could be zero, if the CPU lacks cache.
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* If the size cannot be determined, it will be -1.
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*/
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int32_t l1_data_cache;
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/**
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* L1 instruction cache size in KB. Could be zero, if the CPU lacks
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* cache. If the size cannot be determined, it will be -1.
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* @note On some Intel CPUs, whose instruction cache is in fact
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* a trace cache, the size will be expressed in K uOps.
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*/
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int32_t l1_instruction_cache;
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/**
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* L2 cache size in KB. Could be zero, if the CPU lacks L2 cache.
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* If the size of the cache could not be determined, it will be -1
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*/
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int32_t l2_cache;
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/** L3 cache size in KB. Zero on most systems */
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int32_t l3_cache;
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/** Cache associativity for the L1 data cache. -1 if undetermined */
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int32_t l1_assoc;
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/** Cache associativity for the L2 cache. -1 if undetermined */
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int32_t l2_assoc;
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/** Cache associativity for the L3 cache. -1 if undetermined */
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int32_t l3_assoc;
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/** Cache-line size for L1 data cache. -1 if undetermined */
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int32_t l1_cacheline;
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/** Cache-line size for L2 cache. -1 if undetermined */
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int32_t l2_cacheline;
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/** Cache-line size for L3 cache. -1 if undetermined */
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int32_t l3_cacheline;
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/**
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* The brief and human-friendly CPU codename, which was recognized.<br>
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* Examples:
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* @code
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* +--------+--------+-------+-------+-------+---------------------------------------+-----------------------+
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* | Vendor | Family | Model | Step. | Cache | Brand String | cpu_id_t.cpu_codename |
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* +--------+--------+-------+-------+-------+---------------------------------------+-----------------------+
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* | AMD | 6 | 8 | 0 | 256 | (not available - will be ignored) | "K6-2" |
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* | Intel | 15 | 2 | 5 | 512 | "Intel(R) Xeon(TM) CPU 2.40GHz" | "Xeon (Prestonia)" |
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* | Intel | 6 | 15 | 11 | 4096 | "Intel(R) Core(TM)2 Duo CPU E6550..." | "Conroe (Core 2 Duo)" |
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* | AMD | 15 | 35 | 2 | 1024 | "Dual Core AMD Opteron(tm) Proces..." | "Opteron (Dual Core)" |
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* +--------+--------+-------+-------+-------+---------------------------------------+-----------------------+
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* @endcode
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*/
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char cpu_codename[64];
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/** SSE execution unit size (64 or 128; -1 if N/A) */
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int32_t sse_size;
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/**
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* contain miscellaneous detection information. Used to test about specifics of
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* certain detected features. See CPU_HINT_* macros below. @see Hints
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*/
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uint8_t detection_hints[CPU_HINTS_MAX];
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};
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/**
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* @brief CPU feature identifiers
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*
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* Usage:
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* @code
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* ...
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* struct cpu_raw_data_t raw;
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* struct cpu_id_t id;
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* if (cpuid_get_raw_data(&raw) == 0 && cpu_identify(&raw, &id) == 0) {
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* if (id.flags[CPU_FEATURE_SSE2]) {
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* // The CPU has SSE2...
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* ...
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* } else {
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* // no SSE2
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* }
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* } else {
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* // processor cannot be determined.
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* }
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* @endcode
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*/
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typedef enum {
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CPU_FEATURE_FPU = 0, /*!< Floating point unit */
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CPU_FEATURE_VME, /*!< Virtual mode extension */
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CPU_FEATURE_DE, /*!< Debugging extension */
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CPU_FEATURE_PSE, /*!< Page size extension */
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CPU_FEATURE_TSC, /*!< Time-stamp counter */
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CPU_FEATURE_MSR, /*!< Model-specific regsisters, RDMSR/WRMSR supported */
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CPU_FEATURE_PAE, /*!< Physical address extension */
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CPU_FEATURE_MCE, /*!< Machine check exception */
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CPU_FEATURE_CX8, /*!< CMPXCHG8B instruction supported */
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CPU_FEATURE_APIC, /*!< APIC support */
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CPU_FEATURE_MTRR, /*!< Memory type range registers */
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CPU_FEATURE_SEP, /*!< SYSENTER / SYSEXIT instructions supported */
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CPU_FEATURE_PGE, /*!< Page global enable */
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CPU_FEATURE_MCA, /*!< Machine check architecture */
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CPU_FEATURE_CMOV, /*!< CMOVxx instructions supported */
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CPU_FEATURE_PAT, /*!< Page attribute table */
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CPU_FEATURE_PSE36, /*!< 36-bit page address extension */
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CPU_FEATURE_PN, /*!< Processor serial # implemented (Intel P3 only) */
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CPU_FEATURE_CLFLUSH, /*!< CLFLUSH instruction supported */
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CPU_FEATURE_DTS, /*!< Debug store supported */
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CPU_FEATURE_ACPI, /*!< ACPI support (power states) */
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CPU_FEATURE_MMX, /*!< MMX instruction set supported */
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CPU_FEATURE_FXSR, /*!< FXSAVE / FXRSTOR supported */
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CPU_FEATURE_SSE, /*!< Streaming-SIMD Extensions (SSE) supported */
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CPU_FEATURE_SSE2, /*!< SSE2 instructions supported */
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CPU_FEATURE_SS, /*!< Self-snoop */
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CPU_FEATURE_HT, /*!< Hyper-threading supported (but might be disabled) */
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CPU_FEATURE_TM, /*!< Thermal monitor */
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CPU_FEATURE_IA64, /*!< IA64 supported (Itanium only) */
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CPU_FEATURE_PBE, /*!< Pending-break enable */
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CPU_FEATURE_PNI, /*!< PNI (SSE3) instructions supported */
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CPU_FEATURE_PCLMUL, /*!< PCLMULQDQ instruction supported */
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CPU_FEATURE_DTS64, /*!< 64-bit Debug store supported */
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CPU_FEATURE_MONITOR, /*!< MONITOR / MWAIT supported */
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CPU_FEATURE_DS_CPL, /*!< CPL Qualified Debug Store */
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CPU_FEATURE_VMX, /*!< Virtualization technology supported */
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CPU_FEATURE_SMX, /*!< Safer mode exceptions */
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CPU_FEATURE_EST, /*!< Enhanced SpeedStep */
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CPU_FEATURE_TM2, /*!< Thermal monitor 2 */
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CPU_FEATURE_SSSE3, /*!< SSSE3 instructionss supported (this is different from SSE3!) */
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CPU_FEATURE_CID, /*!< Context ID supported */
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CPU_FEATURE_CX16, /*!< CMPXCHG16B instruction supported */
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CPU_FEATURE_XTPR, /*!< Send Task Priority Messages disable */
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CPU_FEATURE_PDCM, /*!< Performance capabilities MSR supported */
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CPU_FEATURE_DCA, /*!< Direct cache access supported */
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CPU_FEATURE_SSE4_1, /*!< SSE 4.1 instructions supported */
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CPU_FEATURE_SSE4_2, /*!< SSE 4.2 instructions supported */
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CPU_FEATURE_SYSCALL, /*!< SYSCALL / SYSRET instructions supported */
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CPU_FEATURE_XD, /*!< Execute disable bit supported */
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CPU_FEATURE_MOVBE, /*!< MOVBE instruction supported */
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CPU_FEATURE_POPCNT, /*!< POPCNT instruction supported */
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CPU_FEATURE_AES, /*!< AES* instructions supported */
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CPU_FEATURE_XSAVE, /*!< XSAVE/XRSTOR/etc instructions supported */
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CPU_FEATURE_OSXSAVE, /*!< non-privileged copy of OSXSAVE supported */
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CPU_FEATURE_AVX, /*!< Advanced vector extensions supported */
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CPU_FEATURE_MMXEXT, /*!< AMD MMX-extended instructions supported */
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CPU_FEATURE_3DNOW, /*!< AMD 3DNow! instructions supported */
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CPU_FEATURE_3DNOWEXT, /*!< AMD 3DNow! extended instructions supported */
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CPU_FEATURE_NX, /*!< No-execute bit supported */
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CPU_FEATURE_FXSR_OPT, /*!< FFXSR: FXSAVE and FXRSTOR optimizations */
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CPU_FEATURE_RDTSCP, /*!< RDTSCP instruction supported (AMD-only) */
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CPU_FEATURE_LM, /*!< Long mode (x86_64/EM64T) supported */
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CPU_FEATURE_LAHF_LM, /*!< LAHF/SAHF supported in 64-bit mode */
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CPU_FEATURE_CMP_LEGACY, /*!< core multi-processing legacy mode */
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CPU_FEATURE_SVM, /*!< AMD Secure virtual machine */
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CPU_FEATURE_ABM, /*!< LZCNT instruction support */
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CPU_FEATURE_MISALIGNSSE,/*!< Misaligned SSE supported */
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CPU_FEATURE_SSE4A, /*!< SSE 4a from AMD */
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CPU_FEATURE_3DNOWPREFETCH, /*!< PREFETCH/PREFETCHW support */
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CPU_FEATURE_OSVW, /*!< OS Visible Workaround (AMD) */
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CPU_FEATURE_IBS, /*!< Instruction-based sampling */
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CPU_FEATURE_SSE5, /*!< SSE 5 instructions supported (deprecated, will never be 1) */
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CPU_FEATURE_SKINIT, /*!< SKINIT / STGI supported */
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CPU_FEATURE_WDT, /*!< Watchdog timer support */
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CPU_FEATURE_TS, /*!< Temperature sensor */
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CPU_FEATURE_FID, /*!< Frequency ID control */
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CPU_FEATURE_VID, /*!< Voltage ID control */
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CPU_FEATURE_TTP, /*!< THERMTRIP */
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CPU_FEATURE_TM_AMD, /*!< AMD-specified hardware thermal control */
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CPU_FEATURE_STC, /*!< Software thermal control */
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CPU_FEATURE_100MHZSTEPS,/*!< 100 MHz multiplier control */
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CPU_FEATURE_HWPSTATE, /*!< Hardware P-state control */
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CPU_FEATURE_CONSTANT_TSC, /*!< TSC ticks at constant rate */
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CPU_FEATURE_XOP, /*!< The XOP instruction set (same as the old CPU_FEATURE_SSE5) */
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CPU_FEATURE_FMA3, /*!< The FMA3 instruction set */
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CPU_FEATURE_FMA4, /*!< The FMA4 instruction set */
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CPU_FEATURE_TBM, /*!< Trailing bit manipulation instruction support */
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CPU_FEATURE_F16C, /*!< 16-bit FP convert instruction support */
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CPU_FEATURE_RDRAND, /*!< RdRand instruction */
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CPU_FEATURE_X2APIC, /*!< x2APIC, APIC_BASE.EXTD, MSRs 0000_0800h...0000_0BFFh 64-bit ICR (+030h but not +031h), no DFR (+00Eh), SELF_IPI (+040h) also see standard level 0000_000Bh */
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CPU_FEATURE_CPB, /*!< Core performance boost */
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CPU_FEATURE_APERFMPERF, /*!< MPERF/APERF MSRs support */
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CPU_FEATURE_PFI, /*!< Processor Feedback Interface support */
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CPU_FEATURE_PA, /*!< Processor accumulator */
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CPU_FEATURE_AVX2, /*!< AVX2 instructions */
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/* termination: */
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NUM_CPU_FEATURES,
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} cpu_feature_t;
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/**
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* @brief CPU detection hints identifiers
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*
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* Usage: similar to the flags usage
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*/
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typedef enum {
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CPU_HINT_SSE_SIZE_AUTH = 0, /*!< SSE unit size is authoritative (not only a Family/Model guesswork, but based on an actual CPUID bit) */
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/* termination */
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NUM_CPU_HINTS,
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} cpu_hint_t;
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/**
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* @brief Describes common library error codes
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*/
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typedef enum {
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ERR_OK = 0, /*!< "No error" */
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ERR_NO_CPUID = -1, /*!< "CPUID instruction is not supported" */
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ERR_NO_RDTSC = -2, /*!< "RDTSC instruction is not supported" */
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ERR_NO_MEM = -3, /*!< "Memory allocation failed" */
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ERR_OPEN = -4, /*!< "File open operation failed" */
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ERR_BADFMT = -5, /*!< "Bad file format" */
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ERR_NOT_IMP = -6, /*!< "Not implemented" */
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ERR_CPU_UNKN = -7, /*!< "Unsupported processor" */
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ERR_NO_RDMSR = -8, /*!< "RDMSR instruction is not supported" */
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ERR_NO_DRIVER= -9, /*!< "RDMSR driver error (generic)" */
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ERR_NO_PERMS = -10, /*!< "No permissions to install RDMSR driver" */
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ERR_EXTRACT = -11, /*!< "Cannot extract RDMSR driver (read only media?)" */
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ERR_HANDLE = -12, /*!< "Bad handle" */
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ERR_INVMSR = -13, /*!< "Invalid MSR" */
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} cpu_error_t;
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/**
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* @brief Internal structure, used in cpu_tsc_mark, cpu_tsc_unmark and
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* cpu_clock_by_mark
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*/
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struct cpu_mark_t {
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uint64_t tsc; /*!< Time-stamp from RDTSC */
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uint64_t sys_clock; /*!< In microsecond resolution */
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};
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/**
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* @brief Returns the total number of CPUs even if CPUID is not present
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* @retval Number of CPUs available
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*/
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int cpuid_get_total_cpus(void);
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/**
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* @brief Checks if the CPUID instruction is supported
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* @retval 1 if CPUID is present
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* @retval 0 the CPU doesn't have CPUID.
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*/
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int cpuid_present(void);
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/**
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* @brief Executes the CPUID instruction
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* @param eax - the value of the EAX register when executing CPUID
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* @param regs - the results will be stored here. regs[0] = EAX, regs[1] = EBX, ...
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* @note CPUID will be executed with EAX set to the given value and EBX, ECX,
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* EDX set to zero.
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*/
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void cpu_exec_cpuid(uint32_t eax, uint32_t* regs);
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/**
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* @brief Executes the CPUID instruction with the given input registers
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* @note This is just a bit more generic version of cpu_exec_cpuid - it allows
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* you to control all the registers.
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* @param regs - Input/output. Prior to executing CPUID, EAX, EBX, ECX and
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* EDX will be set to regs[0], regs[1], regs[2] and regs[3].
|
|
* After CPUID, this array will contain the results.
|
|
*/
|
|
void cpu_exec_cpuid_ext(uint32_t* regs);
|
|
|
|
/**
|
|
* @brief Obtains the raw CPUID data from the current CPU
|
|
* @param data - a pointer to cpu_raw_data_t structure
|
|
* @returns zero if successful, and some negative number on error.
|
|
* The error message can be obtained by calling \ref cpuid_error.
|
|
* @see cpu_error_t
|
|
*/
|
|
int cpuid_get_raw_data(struct cpu_raw_data_t* data);
|
|
|
|
/**
|
|
* @brief Writes the raw CPUID data to a text file
|
|
* @param data - a pointer to cpu_raw_data_t structure
|
|
* @param filename - the path of the file, where the serialized data should be
|
|
* written. If empty, stdout will be used.
|
|
* @note This is intended primarily for debugging. On some processor, which is
|
|
* not currently supported or not completely recognized by cpu_identify,
|
|
* one can still successfully get the raw data and write it to a file.
|
|
* libcpuid developers can later import this file and debug the detection
|
|
* code as if running on the actual hardware.
|
|
* The file is simple text format of "something=value" pairs. Version info
|
|
* is also written, but the format is not intended to be neither backward-
|
|
* nor forward compatible.
|
|
* @returns zero if successful, and some negative number on error.
|
|
* The error message can be obtained by calling \ref cpuid_error.
|
|
* @see cpu_error_t
|
|
*/
|
|
int cpuid_serialize_raw_data(struct cpu_raw_data_t* data, const char* filename);
|
|
|
|
/**
|
|
* @brief Reads raw CPUID data from file
|
|
* @param data - a pointer to cpu_raw_data_t structure. The deserialized data will
|
|
* be written here.
|
|
* @param filename - the path of the file, containing the serialized raw data.
|
|
* If empty, stdin will be used.
|
|
* @note This function may fail, if the file is created by different version of
|
|
* the library. Also, see the notes on cpuid_serialize_raw_data.
|
|
* @returns zero if successful, and some negative number on error.
|
|
* The error message can be obtained by calling \ref cpuid_error.
|
|
* @see cpu_error_t
|
|
*/
|
|
int cpuid_deserialize_raw_data(struct cpu_raw_data_t* data, const char* filename);
|
|
|
|
/**
|
|
* @brief Identifies the CPU
|
|
* @param raw - Input - a pointer to the raw CPUID data, which is obtained
|
|
* either by cpuid_get_raw_data or cpuid_deserialize_raw_data.
|
|
* Can also be NULL, in which case the functions calls
|
|
* cpuid_get_raw_data itself.
|
|
* @param data - Output - the decoded CPU features/info is written here.
|
|
* @note The function will not fail, even if some of the information
|
|
* cannot be obtained. Even when the CPU is new and thus unknown to
|
|
* libcpuid, some generic info, such as "AMD K9 family CPU" will be
|
|
* written to data.cpu_codename, and most other things, such as the
|
|
* CPU flags, cache sizes, etc. should be detected correctly anyway.
|
|
* However, the function CAN fail, if the CPU is completely alien to
|
|
* libcpuid.
|
|
* @note While cpu_identify() and cpuid_get_raw_data() are fast for most
|
|
* purposes, running them several thousand times per second can hamper
|
|
* performance significantly. Specifically, avoid writing "cpu feature
|
|
* checker" wrapping function, which calls cpu_identify and returns the
|
|
* value of some flag, if that function is going to be called frequently.
|
|
* @returns zero if successful, and some negative number on error.
|
|
* The error message can be obtained by calling \ref cpuid_error.
|
|
* @see cpu_error_t
|
|
*/
|
|
int cpu_identify(struct cpu_raw_data_t* raw, struct cpu_id_t* data);
|
|
|
|
/**
|
|
* @brief Returns the short textual representation of a CPU flag
|
|
* @param feature - the feature, whose textual representation is wanted.
|
|
* @returns a constant string like "fpu", "tsc", "sse2", etc.
|
|
* @note the names of the returned flags are compatible with those from
|
|
* /proc/cpuinfo in Linux, with the exception of `tm_amd'
|
|
*/
|
|
const char* cpu_feature_str(cpu_feature_t feature);
|
|
|
|
/**
|
|
* @brief Returns textual description of the last error
|
|
*
|
|
* libcpuid stores an `errno'-style error status, whose description
|
|
* can be obtained with this function.
|
|
* @note This function is not thread-safe
|
|
* @see cpu_error_t
|
|
*/
|
|
const char* cpuid_error(void);
|
|
|
|
/**
|
|
* @brief Executes RDTSC
|
|
*
|
|
* The RDTSC (ReaD Time Stamp Counter) instruction gives access to an
|
|
* internal 64-bit counter, which usually increments at each clock cycle.
|
|
* This can be used for various timing routines, and as a very precise
|
|
* clock source. It is set to zero on system startup. Beware that may not
|
|
* increment at the same frequency as the CPU. Consecutive calls of RDTSC
|
|
* are, however, guaranteed to return monotonically-increasing values.
|
|
*
|
|
* @param result - a pointer to a 64-bit unsigned integer, where the TSC value
|
|
* will be stored
|
|
*
|
|
* @note If 100% compatibility is a concern, you must first check if the
|
|
* RDTSC instruction is present (if it is not, your program will crash
|
|
* with "invalid opcode" exception). Only some very old processors (i486,
|
|
* early AMD K5 and some Cyrix CPUs) lack that instruction - they should
|
|
* have become exceedingly rare these days. To verify RDTSC presence,
|
|
* run cpu_identify() and check flags[CPU_FEATURE_TSC].
|
|
*
|
|
* @note The monotonically increasing nature of the TSC may be violated
|
|
* on SMP systems, if their TSC clocks run at different rate. If the OS
|
|
* doesn't account for that, the TSC drift may become arbitrary large.
|
|
*/
|
|
void cpu_rdtsc(uint64_t* result);
|
|
|
|
/**
|
|
* @brief Store TSC and timing info
|
|
*
|
|
* This function stores the current TSC value and current
|
|
* time info from a precise OS-specific clock source in the cpu_mark_t
|
|
* structure. The sys_clock field contains time with microsecond resolution.
|
|
* The values can later be used to measure time intervals, number of clocks,
|
|
* FPU frequency, etc.
|
|
* @see cpu_rdtsc
|
|
*
|
|
* @param mark [out] - a pointer to a cpu_mark_t structure
|
|
*/
|
|
void cpu_tsc_mark(struct cpu_mark_t* mark);
|
|
|
|
/**
|
|
* @brief Calculate TSC and timing difference
|
|
*
|
|
* @param mark - input/output: a pointer to a cpu_mark_t sturcture, which has
|
|
* already been initialized by cpu_tsc_mark. The difference in
|
|
* TSC and time will be written here.
|
|
*
|
|
* This function calculates the TSC and time difference, by obtaining the
|
|
* current TSC and timing values and subtracting the contents of the `mark'
|
|
* structure from them. Results are written in the same structure.
|
|
*
|
|
* Example:
|
|
* @code
|
|
* ...
|
|
* struct cpu_mark_t mark;
|
|
* cpu_tsc_mark(&mark);
|
|
* foo();
|
|
* cpu_tsc_unmark(&mark);
|
|
* printf("Foo finished. Executed in %llu cycles and %llu usecs\n",
|
|
* mark.tsc, mark.sys_clock);
|
|
* ...
|
|
* @endcode
|
|
*/
|
|
void cpu_tsc_unmark(struct cpu_mark_t* mark);
|
|
|
|
/**
|
|
* @brief Calculates the CPU clock
|
|
*
|
|
* @param mark - pointer to a cpu_mark_t structure, which has been initialized
|
|
* with cpu_tsc_mark and later `stopped' with cpu_tsc_unmark.
|
|
*
|
|
* @note For reliable results, the marked time interval should be at least about
|
|
* 10 ms.
|
|
*
|
|
* @returns the CPU clock frequency, in MHz. Due to measurement error, it will
|
|
* differ from the true value in a few least-significant bits. Accuracy depends
|
|
* on the timing interval - the more, the better. If the timing interval is
|
|
* insufficient, the result is -1. Also, see the comment on cpu_clock_measure
|
|
* for additional issues and pitfalls in using RDTSC for CPU frequency
|
|
* measurements.
|
|
*/
|
|
int cpu_clock_by_mark(struct cpu_mark_t* mark);
|
|
|
|
/**
|
|
* @brief Returns the CPU clock, as reported by the OS
|
|
*
|
|
* This function uses OS-specific functions to obtain the CPU clock. It may
|
|
* differ from the true clock for several reasons:<br><br>
|
|
*
|
|
* i) The CPU might be in some power saving state, while the OS reports its
|
|
* full-power frequency, or vice-versa.<br>
|
|
* ii) In some cases you can raise or lower the CPU frequency with overclocking
|
|
* utilities and the OS will not notice.
|
|
*
|
|
* @returns the CPU clock frequency in MHz. If the OS is not (yet) supported
|
|
* or lacks the necessary reporting machinery, the return value is -1
|
|
*/
|
|
int cpu_clock_by_os(void);
|
|
|
|
/**
|
|
* @brief Measure the CPU clock frequency
|
|
*
|
|
* @param millis - How much time to waste in the busy-wait cycle. In millisecs.
|
|
* Useful values 10 - 1000
|
|
* @param quad_check - Do a more thorough measurement if nonzero
|
|
* (see the explanation).
|
|
*
|
|
* The function performs a busy-wait cycle for the given time and calculates
|
|
* the CPU frequency by the difference of the TSC values. The accuracy of the
|
|
* calculation depends on the length of the busy-wait cycle: more is better,
|
|
* but 100ms should be enough for most purposes.
|
|
*
|
|
* While this will calculate the CPU frequency correctly in most cases, there are
|
|
* several reasons why it might be incorrect:<br>
|
|
*
|
|
* i) RDTSC doesn't guarantee it will run at the same clock as the CPU.
|
|
* Apparently there aren't CPUs at the moment, but still, there's no
|
|
* guarantee.<br>
|
|
* ii) The CPU might be in a low-frequency power saving mode, and the CPU
|
|
* might be switched to higher frequency at any time. If this happens
|
|
* during the measurement, the result can be anywhere between the
|
|
* low and high frequencies. Also, if you're interested in the
|
|
* high frequency value only, this function might return the low one
|
|
* instead.<br>
|
|
* iii) On SMP systems exhibiting TSC drift (see \ref cpu_rdtsc)
|
|
*
|
|
* the quad_check option will run four consecutive measurements and
|
|
* then return the average of the two most-consistent results. The total
|
|
* runtime of the function will still be `millis' - consider using
|
|
* a bit more time for the timing interval.
|
|
*
|
|
* Finally, for benchmarking / CPU intensive applications, the best strategy is
|
|
* to use the cpu_tsc_mark() / cpu_tsc_unmark() / cpu_clock_by_mark() method.
|
|
* Begin by mark()-ing about one second after application startup (allowing the
|
|
* power-saving manager to kick in and rise the frequency during that time),
|
|
* then unmark() just before application finishing. The result will most
|
|
* acurately represent at what frequency your app was running.
|
|
*
|
|
* @returns the CPU clock frequency in MHz (within some measurement error
|
|
* margin). If RDTSC is not supported, the result is -1.
|
|
*/
|
|
int cpu_clock_measure(int millis, int quad_check);
|
|
|
|
/**
|
|
* @brief Measure the CPU clock frequency using instruction-counting
|
|
*
|
|
* @param millis - how much time to allocate for each run, in milliseconds
|
|
* @param runs - how many runs to perform
|
|
*
|
|
* The function performs a busy-wait cycle using a known number of "heavy" (SSE)
|
|
* instructions. These instructions run at (more or less guaranteed) 1 IPC rate,
|
|
* so by running a busy loop for a fixed amount of time, and measuring the
|
|
* amount of instructions done, the CPU clock is accurately measured.
|
|
*
|
|
* Of course, this function is still affected by the power-saving schemes, so
|
|
* the warnings as of cpu_clock_measure() still apply. However, this function is
|
|
* immune to problems with detection, related to the Intel Nehalem's "Turbo"
|
|
* mode, where the internal clock is raised, but the RDTSC rate is unaffected.
|
|
*
|
|
* The function will run for about (millis * runs) milliseconds.
|
|
* You can make only a single busy-wait run (runs == 1); however, this can
|
|
* be affected by task scheduling (which will break the counting), so allowing
|
|
* more than one run is recommended. As run length is not imperative for
|
|
* accurate readings (e.g., 50ms is sufficient), you can afford a lot of short
|
|
* runs, e.g. 10 runs of 50ms or 20 runs of 25ms.
|
|
*
|
|
* Recommended values - millis = 50, runs = 4. For more robustness,
|
|
* increase the number of runs.
|
|
*
|
|
* NOTE: on Bulldozer and later CPUs, the busy-wait cycle runs at 1.4 IPC, thus
|
|
* the results are skewed. This is corrected internally by dividing the resulting
|
|
* value by 1.4.
|
|
* However, this only occurs if the thread is executed on a single CMT
|
|
* module - if there are other threads competing for resources, the results are
|
|
* unpredictable. Make sure you run cpu_clock_by_ic() on a CPU that is free from
|
|
* competing threads, or if there are such threads, they shouldn't exceed the
|
|
* number of modules. On a Bulldozer X8, that means 4 threads.
|
|
*
|
|
* @returns the CPU clock frequency in MHz (within some measurement error
|
|
* margin). If SSE is not supported, the result is -1. If the input parameters
|
|
* are incorrect, or some other internal fault is detected, the result is -2.
|
|
*/
|
|
int cpu_clock_by_ic(int millis, int runs);
|
|
|
|
/**
|
|
* @brief Get the CPU clock frequency (all-in-one method)
|
|
*
|
|
* This is an all-in-one method for getting the CPU clock frequency.
|
|
* It tries to use the OS for that. If the OS doesn't have this info, it
|
|
* uses cpu_clock_measure with 200ms time interval and quadruple checking.
|
|
*
|
|
* @returns the CPU clock frequency in MHz. If every possible method fails,
|
|
* the result is -1.
|
|
*/
|
|
int cpu_clock(void);
|
|
|
|
/**
|
|
* @brief Returns the libcpuid version
|
|
*
|
|
* @returns the string representation of the libcpuid version, like "0.1.1"
|
|
*/
|
|
const char* cpuid_lib_version(void);
|
|
|
|
typedef void (*libcpuid_warn_fn_t) (const char *msg);
|
|
/**
|
|
* @brief Sets the warning print function
|
|
*
|
|
* In some cases, the internal libcpuid machinery would like to emit useful
|
|
* debug warnings. By default, these warnings are written to stderr. However,
|
|
* you can set a custom function that will receive those warnings.
|
|
*
|
|
* @param warn_fun - the warning function you want to set. If NULL, warnings
|
|
* are disabled. The function takes const char* argument.
|
|
*
|
|
* @returns the current warning function. You can use the return value to
|
|
* keep the previous warning function and restore it at your discretion.
|
|
*/
|
|
libcpuid_warn_fn_t cpuid_set_warn_function(libcpuid_warn_fn_t warn_fun);
|
|
|
|
/**
|
|
* @brief Sets the verbosiness level
|
|
*
|
|
* When the verbosiness level is above zero, some functions might print
|
|
* diagnostic information about what are they doing. The higher the level is,
|
|
* the more detail is printed. Level zero is guaranteed to omit all such
|
|
* output. The output is written using the same machinery as the warnings,
|
|
* @see cpuid_set_warn_function()
|
|
*
|
|
* @param level the desired verbosiness level. Useful values 0..2 inclusive
|
|
*/
|
|
void cpuid_set_verbosiness_level(int level);
|
|
|
|
|
|
/**
|
|
* @brief a structure that holds a list of processor names
|
|
*/
|
|
struct cpu_list_t {
|
|
/** Number of entries in the list */
|
|
int num_entries;
|
|
/** Pointers to names. There will be num_entries of them */
|
|
char **names;
|
|
};
|
|
|
|
/**
|
|
* @brief Gets a list of all known CPU names from a specific vendor.
|
|
*
|
|
* This function compiles a list of all known CPU (code)names
|
|
* (i.e. the possible values of cpu_id_t::cpu_codename) for the given vendor.
|
|
*
|
|
* There are about 100 entries for Intel and AMD, and a few for the other
|
|
* vendors. The list is written out in approximate chronological introduction
|
|
* order of the parts.
|
|
*
|
|
* @param vendor the vendor to be queried
|
|
* @param list [out] the resulting list will be written here.
|
|
* NOTE: As the memory is dynamically allocated, be sure to call
|
|
* cpuid_free_cpu_list() after you're done with the data
|
|
* @see cpu_list_t
|
|
*/
|
|
void cpuid_get_cpu_list(cpu_vendor_t vendor, struct cpu_list_t* list);
|
|
|
|
/**
|
|
* @brief Frees a CPU list
|
|
*
|
|
* This function deletes all the memory associated with a CPU list, as obtained
|
|
* by cpuid_get_cpu_list()
|
|
*
|
|
* @param list - the list to be free()'d.
|
|
*/
|
|
void cpuid_free_cpu_list(struct cpu_list_t* list);
|
|
|
|
/**
|
|
* @brief Starts/opens a driver, needed to read MSRs (Model Specific Registers)
|
|
*
|
|
* On systems that support it, this function will create a temporary
|
|
* system driver, that has privileges to execute the RDMSR instruction.
|
|
* After the driver is created, you can read MSRs by calling \ref cpu_rdmsr
|
|
*
|
|
* @returns a handle to the driver on success, and NULL on error.
|
|
* The error message can be obtained by calling \ref cpuid_error.
|
|
* @see cpu_error_t
|
|
*/
|
|
struct msr_driver_t;
|
|
struct msr_driver_t* cpu_msr_driver_open(void);
|
|
|
|
/**
|
|
* @brief Reads a Model-Specific Register (MSR)
|
|
*
|
|
* If the CPU has MSRs (as indicated by the CPU_FEATURE_MSR flag), you can
|
|
* read a MSR with the given index by calling this function.
|
|
*
|
|
* There are several prerequisites you must do before reading MSRs:
|
|
* 1) You must ensure the CPU has RDMSR. Check the CPU_FEATURE_MSR flag
|
|
* in cpu_id_t::flags
|
|
* 2) You must ensure that the CPU implements the specific MSR you intend to
|
|
* read.
|
|
* 3) You must open a MSR-reader driver. RDMSR is a privileged instruction and
|
|
* needs ring-0 access in order to work. This temporary driver is created
|
|
* by calling \ref cpu_msr_driver_open
|
|
*
|
|
* @param handle - a handle to the MSR reader driver, as created by
|
|
* cpu_msr_driver_open
|
|
* @param msr_index - the numeric ID of the MSR you want to read
|
|
* @param result - a pointer to a 64-bit integer, where the MSR value is stored
|
|
*
|
|
* @returns zero if successful, and some negative number on error.
|
|
* The error message can be obtained by calling \ref cpuid_error.
|
|
* @see cpu_error_t
|
|
*/
|
|
int cpu_rdmsr(struct msr_driver_t* handle, int msr_index, uint64_t* result);
|
|
|
|
|
|
typedef enum {
|
|
INFO_MPERF, /*!< Maximum performance frequency clock. This
|
|
is a counter, which increments as a
|
|
proportion of the actual processor speed */
|
|
INFO_APERF, /*!< Actual performance frequency clock. This
|
|
accumulates the core clock counts when the
|
|
core is active. */
|
|
INFO_CUR_MULTIPLIER, /*!< Current CPU:FSB ratio, multiplied by 100.
|
|
e.g., a CPU:FSB value of 18.5 reads as
|
|
1850. */
|
|
INFO_MAX_MULTIPLIER, /*!< Maxumum CPU:FSB ratio for this CPU,
|
|
multiplied by 100 */
|
|
INFO_TEMPERATURE, /*!< The current core temperature in Celsius */
|
|
INFO_THROTTLING, /*!< 1 if the current logical processor is
|
|
throttling. 0 if it is running normally. */
|
|
} cpu_msrinfo_request_t;
|
|
|
|
/**
|
|
* @brief Reads extended CPU information from Model-Specific Registers.
|
|
* @param handle - a handle to an open MSR driver, @see cpu_msr_driver_open
|
|
* @param which - which info field should be returned. A list of
|
|
* available information entities is listed in the
|
|
* cpu_msrinfo_request_t enum.
|
|
* @retval - if the requested information is available for the current
|
|
* processor model, the respective value is returned.
|
|
* if no information is available, or the CPU doesn't support
|
|
* the query, the special value CPU_INVALID_VALUE is returned
|
|
*/
|
|
int cpu_msrinfo(struct msr_driver_t* handle, cpu_msrinfo_request_t which);
|
|
#define CPU_INVALID_VALUE 0x3fffffff
|
|
|
|
/**
|
|
* @brief Closes an open MSR driver
|
|
*
|
|
* This function unloads the MSR driver opened by cpu_msr_driver_open and
|
|
* frees any resources associated with it.
|
|
*
|
|
* @param handle - a handle to the MSR reader driver, as created by
|
|
* cpu_msr_driver_open
|
|
*
|
|
* @returns zero if successful, and some negative number on error.
|
|
* The error message can be obtained by calling \ref cpuid_error.
|
|
* @see cpu_error_t
|
|
*/
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int cpu_msr_driver_close(struct msr_driver_t* handle);
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#ifdef __cplusplus
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}; /* extern "C" */
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#endif
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/** @} */
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#endif /* __LIBCPUID_H__ */
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