CPUID implementations in C++

42,615

Solution 1

Accessing raw CPUID information is actually very easy, here is a C++ class for that which works in Windows, Linux and OSX:

#ifndef CPUID_H
#define CPUID_H

#ifdef _WIN32
#include <limits.h>
#include <intrin.h>
typedef unsigned __int32  uint32_t;

#else
#include <stdint.h>
#endif

class CPUID {
  uint32_t regs[4];

public:
  explicit CPUID(unsigned i) {
#ifdef _WIN32
    __cpuid((int *)regs, (int)i);

#else
    asm volatile
      ("cpuid" : "=a" (regs[0]), "=b" (regs[1]), "=c" (regs[2]), "=d" (regs[3])
       : "a" (i), "c" (0));
    // ECX is set to zero for CPUID function 4
#endif
  }

  const uint32_t &EAX() const {return regs[0];}
  const uint32_t &EBX() const {return regs[1];}
  const uint32_t &ECX() const {return regs[2];}
  const uint32_t &EDX() const {return regs[3];}
};

#endif // CPUID_H

To use it just instantiate an instance of the class, load the CPUID instruction you are interested in and examine the registers. For example:

#include "CPUID.h"

#include <iostream>
#include <string>

using namespace std;

int main(int argc, char *argv[]) {
  CPUID cpuID(0); // Get CPU vendor

  string vendor;
  vendor += string((const char *)&cpuID.EBX(), 4);
  vendor += string((const char *)&cpuID.EDX(), 4);
  vendor += string((const char *)&cpuID.ECX(), 4);

  cout << "CPU vendor = " << vendor << endl;

  return 0;
}

This Wikipedia page tells you how to use CPUID: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CPUID

EDIT: Added #include <intrin.h> for Windows, per comments.

Solution 2

See this MSDN article about __cpuid.

There is a comprehensive sample that compiles with Visual Studio 2005 or better. For Visual Studio 6, you can use this instead of the compiler instrinsic __cpuid:

void __cpuid(int CPUInfo[4], int InfoType)
{
 __asm 
  {
     mov    esi, CPUInfo
     mov    eax, InfoType
     xor    ecx, ecx  
     cpuid  
     mov    dword ptr [esi +  0], eax
     mov    dword ptr [esi +  4], ebx  
     mov    dword ptr [esi +  8], ecx  
     mov    dword ptr [esi + 12], edx  
  }
}

For Visual Studio 2005, you can use this instead of the compiler instrinsic __cpuidex:

void __cpuidex(int CPUInfo[4], int InfoType, int ECXValue)
{
 __asm 
  {
     mov    esi, CPUInfo
     mov    eax, InfoType
     mov    ecx, ECXValue
     cpuid  
     mov    dword ptr [esi +  0], eax
     mov    dword ptr [esi +  4], ebx  
     mov    dword ptr [esi +  8], ecx  
     mov    dword ptr [esi + 12], edx  
  }
}

Solution 3

Might not be exactly what you are looking for, but Intel have a good article and sample code for enumerating Intel 64 bit platform architectures (processor, cache, etc.) which also seems to cover 32 bit x86 processors.

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Kris
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Kris

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Updated on March 25, 2021

Comments

  • Kris
    Kris about 3 years

    I would like to know if somebody around here has some good examples of a C++ CPUID implementation that can be referenced from any of the managed .net languages.

    Also, should this not be the case, should I be aware of certain implementation differences between X86 and X64?

    I would like to use CPUID to get info on the machine my software is running on (crashreporting etc...) and I want to keep everything as widely compatible as possible.

    Primary reason I ask is because I am a total noob when it comes to writing what will probably be all machine instructions though I have basic knowledge about CPU registers and so on...

    Before people start telling me to Google: I found some examples online, but usually they were not meant to allow interaction from managed code and none of the examples were aimed at both X86 and X64. Most examples appeared to be X86 specific.