5f2c303a7e
/proc/cpuinfo represents online CPUs only, and the number of CPUs is limited by the 'maxcpus' option. /sys/devices/system/cpu/possible is a better option for our purpose since it represents the possible CPUs that can ever be available in the system, including the offline CPUs. And it's not limited by 'maxcpus'. Though the Linux command line parameter nr_cpus and possible_cpus still have impact on /sys/devices/system/cpu/possible. Tracked-On: #3854 Signed-off-by: Zide Chen <zide.chen@intel.com> Acked-by: Victor Sun <victor.sun@intel.com> |
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acrn-config | ||
acrn-manager | ||
acrnbridge | ||
efi-stub | ||
life_mngr | ||
tools | ||
Makefile | ||
README.rst |
README.rst
ACRN tools ########## The open source `Project ACRN`_ defines a device hypervisor reference stack and an architecture for running multiple software subsystems, managed securely, on a consolidated system by means of a virtual machine manager. It also defines a reference framework implementation for virtual device emulation, called the "ACRN Device Model". This folder holds the source to a number of tools that facilitate the management, debugging, profiling, and logging of multi-OS systems based on ACRN. You can find out more about Project ACRN and its set of tools on the `Project ACRN documentation`_ website. .. _`Project ACRN`: https://projectacrn.org .. _`Project ACRN documentation`: https://projectacrn.github.io/