Hello,

You can check:

1) How many cores there are in the config.ini (or equivalent) file
2) How many cores the kernel detects during boot time (system.terminal
file: [    0.060288] Brought up 2 CPUs)

Regards,

2015-01-31 10:53 GMT+01:00, Tayebe Sadeghi via gem5-users <gem5-users@gem5.org>:
> HiExcuse me,i have a problem.At first i use chroot into mounted disk image
> then compile a sample  attached code with g++. In sample code i have a
> command that return number of  existing processor and mapping thread on
> existing cpu. I don't edit fs.py.I use this command  in running gem5 but
> gem5 show me that there is one processor.I don't know why gem5 return one
> processor whereas I use --num-cpu=2???Thanks.
> command:./build/X86/gem5.fast configs/example/fs.py
> --kernel=/dist/m5/system1/binaries/x86_64-vmlinux-2.6.22.9.smp
> --disk-image=/dist/m5/system1/disks/linux-x86.img --script=salam.rCS
> --num-cpus=2  --caches --cpu-type=timing
>


-- 
--
Fernando A. Endo, PhD student and researcher

Université de Grenoble, UJF
France
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