1 The following are demonstrations of the cputypes.d script,
4 This is running cputypes.d on a desktop,
7 CPU CHIP PSET LGRP CLOCK TYPE FPU
8 0 0 0 0 867 i386 i387 compatible
14 The following is a multi CPU x86 server,
17 CPU CHIP PSET LGRP CLOCK TYPE FPU
18 0 0 0 0 2791 i386 i387 compatible
19 1 3 1 0 2791 i386 i387 compatible
20 2 0 0 0 2791 i386 i387 compatible
21 3 3 0 0 2791 i386 i387 compatible
23 Much more interesting! We can see from the CHIP field that there is actually
24 two CPUs, each with two cores. There is also two processor sets (0, 1).
26 The CPUs were printed in CPU id order by mere chance.
30 Here is a multi CPU SPARC server,
33 CPU CHIP PSET LGRP CLOCK TYPE FPU
34 0 0 0 0 400 sparcv9 sparcv9
35 1 1 0 0 400 sparcv9 sparcv9
36 4 4 0 0 400 sparcv9 sparcv9
37 5 5 0 0 400 sparcv9 sparcv9