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diff --git a/sys-utils/lscpu.1 b/sys-utils/lscpu.1 new file mode 100644 index 0000000..23dee9b --- /dev/null +++ b/sys-utils/lscpu.1 @@ -0,0 +1,184 @@ +.TH LSCPU 1 "November 2015" "util-linux" "User Commands" +.SH NAME +lscpu \- display information about the CPU architecture +.SH SYNOPSIS +.B lscpu +.RB [ \-a | \-b | \-c | \-J "] [" \-x "] [" \-y "] [" \-s " \fIdirectory\fP] [" \-e [=\fIlist\fP]| \-p [=\fIlist\fP]] +.br +.B lscpu +.BR \-h | \-V +.SH DESCRIPTION +.B lscpu +gathers CPU architecture information from sysfs, /proc/cpuinfo and any +applicable architecture-specific libraries (e.g.\& librtas on Powerpc). The +command output can be optimized for parsing or for easy readability by humans. +The information includes, for example, the number of CPUs, threads, cores, +sockets, and Non-Uniform Memory Access (NUMA) nodes. There is also information +about the CPU caches and cache sharing, family, model, bogoMIPS, byte order, +and stepping. +.sp +In virtualized environments, the CPU architecture information displayed +reflects the configuration of the guest operating system which is +typically different from the physical (host) system. On architectures that +support retrieving physical topology information, +.B lscpu +also displays the number of physical sockets, chips, cores in the host system. +.sp +Options that result in an output table have a \fIlist\fP argument. Use this +argument to customize the command output. Specify a comma-separated list of +column labels to limit the output table to only the specified columns, arranged +in the specified order. See \fBCOLUMNS\fP for a list of valid column labels. The +column labels are not case sensitive. +.sp +Not all columns are supported on all architectures. If an unsupported column is +specified, \fBlscpu\fP prints the column but does not provide any data for it. + +.SS COLUMNS +Note that topology elements (core, socket, etc.) use a sequential unique ID +starting from zero, but CPU logical numbers follow the kernel where there is +no guarantee of sequential numbering. +.TP +.B CPU +The logical CPU number of a CPU as used by the Linux kernel. +.TP +.B CORE +The logical core number. A core can contain several CPUs. +.TP +.B SOCKET +The logical socket number. A socket can contain several cores. +.TP +.B BOOK +The logical book number. A book can contain several sockets. +.TP +.B DRAWER +The logical drawer number. A drawer can contain several books. +.TP +.B NODE +The logical NUMA node number. A node can contain several drawers. +.TP +.B CACHE +Information about how caches are shared between CPUs. +.TP +.B ADDRESS +The physical address of a CPU. +.TP +.B ONLINE +Indicator that shows whether the Linux instance currently makes use of the CPU. +.TP +.B CONFIGURED +Indicator that shows if the hypervisor has allocated the CPU to the virtual +hardware on which the Linux instance runs. CPUs that are configured can be set +online by the Linux instance. +This column contains data only if your hardware system and hypervisor support +dynamic CPU resource allocation. +.TP +.B POLARIZATION +This column contains data for Linux instances that run on virtual hardware with +a hypervisor that can switch the CPU dispatching mode (polarization). The +polarization can be: +.RS +.TP 12 +.B horizontal\fP +The workload is spread across all available CPUs. +.TP 12 +.B vertical +The workload is concentrated on few CPUs. +.P +For vertical polarization, the column also shows the degree of concentration, +high, medium, or low. This column contains data only if your hardware system +and hypervisor support CPU polarization. +.RE +.TP +.B MAXMHZ +Maximum megahertz value for the CPU. Useful when \fBlscpu\fP is used as hardware +inventory information gathering tool. Notice that the megahertz value is +dynamic, and driven by CPU governor depending on current resource need. +.TP +.B MINMHZ +Minimum megahertz value for the CPU. +.SH OPTIONS +.TP +.BR \-a , " \-\-all" +Include lines for online and offline CPUs in the output (default for \fB-e\fR). +This option may only be specified together with option \fB-e\fR or \fB-p\fR. +.TP +.BR \-b , " \-\-online" +Limit the output to online CPUs (default for \fB-p\fR). +This option may only be specified together with option \fB-e\fR or \fB-p\fR. +.TP +.BR \-c , " \-\-offline" +Limit the output to offline CPUs. +This option may only be specified together with option \fB-e\fR or \fB-p\fR. +.TP +.BR \-e , " \-\-extended" [=\fIlist\fP] +Display the CPU information in human-readable format. + +If the \fIlist\fP argument is omitted, all columns for which data is available +are included in the command output. + +When specifying the \fIlist\fP argument, the string of option, equal sign (=), and +\fIlist\fP must not contain any blanks or other whitespace. +Examples: '\fB-e=cpu,node\fP' or '\fB--extended=cpu,node\fP'. +.TP +.BR \-h , " \-\-help" +Display help text and exit. +.TP +.BR \-J , " \-\-json" +Use JSON output format for the default summary or extended output (see \fB\-\-extended\fP). +.TP +.BR \-p , " \-\-parse" [=\fIlist\fP] +Optimize the command output for easy parsing. + +If the \fIlist\fP argument is omitted, the command output is compatible with earlier +versions of \fBlscpu\fP. In this compatible format, two commas are used to separate +CPU cache columns. If no CPU caches are identified the cache column is omitted. +.br +If the \fIlist\fP argument is used, cache columns are separated with a colon (:). + +When specifying the \fIlist\fP argument, the string of option, equal sign (=), and +\fIlist\fP must not contain any blanks or other whitespace. +Examples: '\fB-p=cpu,node\fP' or '\fB--parse=cpu,node\fP'. +.TP +.BR \-s , " \-\-sysroot " \fIdirectory\fP +Gather CPU data for a Linux instance other than the instance from which the +\fBlscpu\fP command is issued. The specified \fIdirectory\fP is the system root +of the Linux instance to be inspected. +.TP +.BR \-x , " \-\-hex" +Use hexadecimal masks for CPU sets (for example 0x3). The default is to print +the sets in list format (for example 0,1). +.TP +.BR \-y , " \-\-physical" +Display physical IDs for all columns with topology elements (core, socket, etc.). +Other than logical IDs, which are assigned by \fBlscpu\fP, physical IDs are +platform-specific values that are provided by the kernel. Physical IDs are not +necessarily unique and they might not be arranged sequentially. +If the kernel could not retrieve a physical ID for an element \fBlscpu\fP prints +the dash (-) character. + +The CPU logical numbers are not affected by this option. +.TP +.BR \-V , " \-\-version" +Display version information and exit. +.TP +.B \-\-output\-all +Output all available columns. This option must be combined with either +.BR \-\-extended " or " \-\-parse . +.SH BUGS +The basic overview of CPU family, model, etc. is always based on the first +CPU only. + +Sometimes in Xen Dom0 the kernel reports wrong data. + +On virtual hardware the number of cores per socket, etc. can be wrong. +.SH AUTHOR +.nf +Cai Qian <qcai@redhat.com> +Karel Zak <kzak@redhat.com> +Heiko Carstens <heiko.carstens@de.ibm.com> +.fi +.SH "SEE ALSO" +.BR chcpu (8) +.SH AVAILABILITY +The lscpu command is part of the util-linux package and is available from +https://www.kernel.org/pub/linux/utils/util-linux/. |