How can I know in a C program, on which physical processor and core my code is running? I'm using Linux and gcc 4.4.3.
-
3Why do you need or want to know that? – Kimvais May 17 '11 at 06:13
-
1It can help me to understand the behavior of my program on a SMT Architecture – semteu May 17 '11 at 11:45
-
@Kimvais http://software.intel.com/en-us/articles/intel-64-architecture-processor-topology-enumeration/ – Justicle May 17 '12 at 23:36
-
Non-programmatically, `htop(1)` (a more modern version of `top(1)`) has as `PROCESSOR` column, which shows you which core a process last ran on. (press F2, columns, find PROCESSOR and add it, F10(done)). – Peter Cordes Apr 28 '16 at 15:57
-
related: https://stackoverflow.com/questions/491520/how-can-i-get-the-cpu-core-number-from-within-a-user-space-app-linux-c – Ciro Santilli OurBigBook.com Apr 18 '20 at 16:49
5 Answers
call returns virtual CPU number. Mapping of virtual CPU to real CPU info is in /proc/cpuinfo.
If your system supports VDSO, then sched_getcpu()
is relatively fast.
CPU number can be also obtained using CPUID
instruction, but it is slower than sched_getcpu()
.

- 208,748
- 37
- 389
- 560

- 4,262
- 2
- 33
- 38
-
Here is a concrete example with `sched_setaffinity`: https://stackoverflow.com/questions/10490756/how-to-use-sched-getaffinity-and-sched-setaffinity-in-linux-from-c/50117787#50117787 – Ciro Santilli OurBigBook.com May 01 '18 at 13:58
See http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CPUID#Accessing_the_id_from_other_languages
What you want is the APIC ID... basically:
cpuid
shr ebx, 24

- 102,968
- 15
- 177
- 252
-
cpuid is slow. sched_getcpu() can be used instead. It is fast if VDSO is enabled. – stepancheg May 15 '13 at 20:21
You may check /proc//stat file system, according to http://www.kernel.org/doc/Documentation/filesystems/proc.txt, you should just check task_cpu flag.
As example without correct types and error checking:
struct pstat
{
int pid; //process id
char tcomm[256];//filename of the executable
char state[2]; //state (R is running, S is sleeping, D is sleeping in an
//uninterruptible wait, Z is zombie, T is traced or stopped)
int ppid;// process id of the parent process
int pgrp;// pgrp of the process
int sid;// session id
int tty_nr;// tty the process uses
int tty_pgrp;// pgrp of the tty
int flags;// task flags
int min_flt;// number of minor faults
int cmin_flt;// number of minor faults with child's
int maj_flt;// number of major faults
int cmaj_flt;// number of major faults with child's
int utime;// user mode jiffies
int stime;// kernel mode jiffies
int cutime;// user mode jiffies with child's
int cstime;// kernel mode jiffies with child's
int priority;// priority level
int nice;// nice level
int num_threads;// number of threads
int it_real_value;// (obsolete, always 0)
int start_time;// time the process started after system boot
int vsize;// virtual memory size
int rss;// resident set memory size
int rsslim;// current limit in bytes on the rss
int start_code;// address above which program text can run
int end_code;// address below which program text can run
int start_stack;// address of the start of the stack
int esp;// current value of ESP
int eip;// current value of EIP
int pending;// bitmap of pending signals
int blocked;// bitmap of blocked signals
int sigign;// bitmap of ignored signals
int sigcatch;// bitmap of catched signals
int wchan;// address where process went to sleep
int i0;// (place holder)
int i1;// (place holder)
int exit_signal;// signal to send to parent thread on exit
int task_cpu;// which CPU the task is scheduled on
int rt_priority;// realtime priority
int policy;// scheduling policy (man sched_setscheduler)
int blkio_ticks;// time spent waiting for block IO
int gtime;// guest time of the task in jiffies
int cgtime;// guest time of the task children in jiffies
} p ;
int main()
{
char name[256];
char state[8];
FILE* f = fopen("/proc/self/stat", "r");
fscanf(f, "%d%s%s%d%d%d%d%d%d%d%d%d%d%d%d%d%d%d%d%d%d%d%d%d%d%d%d%d%d%d%d%d%d%d%d%d%d%d%d%d%d%d%d%d",
&p.pid, &p.tcomm, &p.state, &p.ppid, &p.pgrp, &p.sid, &p.tty_nr, &p.tty_pgrp, &p.flags,
&p.min_flt, &p.cmin_flt, &p.maj_flt, &p.cmaj_flt, &p.utime, &p.stime, &p.cutime, &p.cstime,
&p.priority, &p.nice, &p.num_threads, &p.it_real_value, &p.start_time, &p.vsize, &p.rss,
&p.rsslim, &p.start_code, &p.end_code, &p.start_stack, &p.esp, &p.eip, &p.pending, &p.blocked,
&p.sigign, &p.sigcatch, &p.wchan, &p.i0, &p.i1, &p.exit_signal, &p.task_cpu, &p.rt_priority, &p.policy,
&p.blkio_ticks, &p.gtime, &p.cgtime);
printf("CPU %d\n", p.task_cpu);
return 0;
}

- 634
- 3
- 6
You can get the affinity of the process to a processor using GCC. The CPU affinity APIs might help you out. Are you trying to use this information to ensure your process is not interrupted or such high priority task?

- 1,893
- 9
- 9
By and large it's hard to find this out in a meaningful way. Your thread will often run on many different processors during its life. You could call a function to ask which processor you are on and get a context switch whilst the function is executing. What should the function return?

- 601,492
- 42
- 1,072
- 1,490
-
Practical uses do come up... for example - with some potential spinning on detecting such context switches, you can (at worst, after a couple attempts) get a reliable clock-cycles-since-startup reading and know which core it's from. As part of a process startup-procedure, you can take clock readings with affinity set to each core in turn, allowing you to have a range of possible values for drift between specific pairs of cores. It's fiddly, but when applicable can be the best approach to high-res timing on typical modern x86 hardware.... – Tony Delroy May 17 '11 at 08:47
-
Which function can I use in my program to know on which processor (core) my program at a given time ? and how can I get the context switch ? – semteu May 17 '11 at 11:43
-