Simple yet fancy CPU architecture fetching tool
cpufetch is a command-line tool written in C that displays the CPU information in a clean and beautiful way
Table of contents
- 1. Support
- 2. Installation
- 3. Examples
- 4. Colors
- 5. Implementation
- 6. Bugs or improvements
- 7. Acknowledgements
- 8. cpufetch for GPUs (gpufetch)
1. Support
OS | x86_64 / x86 | ARM | RISC-V | PowerPC |
---|---|---|---|---|
GNU / Linux | ||||
Windows | ||||
Android | ||||
macOS | ||||
FreeBSD | β |
NOTES:
- Colors will be used in Windows only if the terminal supports it.
- Support in macOS ARM is limited to Apple chips only
2. Installation
2.1 Installing from a package
Choose the right package for your operating system:
If there is no available package for your OS, you can download the cpufetch binary from the releases page, or build cpufetch from source (see below).
2.2 Building from source
You will need a C compiler (e.g, gcc
) and make
to compile cpufetch
. Just clone the repo and run make
:
git clone https://github.com/Dr-Noob/cpufetch
cd cpufetch
make
./cpufetch
2.3 Android
- Install
termux
app (terminal emulator) - Run
pkg install -y git make clang
inside termux. - Build from source normally:
- git clone https://github.com/Dr-Noob/cpufetch
- cd cpufetch
- make
- ./cpufetch
3. Examples
3.1 x86_64
AMD EPYC HPC server
Intel Xeon HPC server
3.2 ARM
Samsung Galaxy S8 (left) Xiaomi Redmi Note 7 (right)
3.3 PowerPC
Talos II
4. Colors
By default, cpufetch
will print the CPU logo with the system colorscheme. However, you can set a custom color scheme in two different ways:
4.1 Specifying a name
By specifying a name, cpufetch will use the specific colors of each manufacture. Valid values are:
- intel
- intel-new
- amd
- ibm
- arm
./cpufetch --color intel (default color for Intel)
4.2 Specifying the colors in RGB format
5 colors must be given in RGB with the format: [R,G,B:R,G,B:R,G,B:R,G,B:R,G,B]
. These colors correspond to the CPU logo color (first 3 colors) and for the text colors (following 2).
./cpufetch --color 239,90,45:210,200,200:0,0,0:100,200,45:0,200,200
5. Implementation
See cpufetch programming documentation.
6. Bugs or improvements
See cpufetch contributing guidelines.
7. Acknowledgements
Thanks to the fellow contributors and interested people in the project. Special thanks to:
- Gonzalocl and OdnetninI: Tested cpufetch in the earlier versions of the project in many different CPUs.
- Kyngo: Tested cpufetch in the Apple M1 CPU.
- avollmerhaus: Helped with PowerPC port giving ssh access to a PowerPC machine.
- bbonev and stephan-cr: Reviewed the source code.
- mdoksa76 and exkc: Excellent ideas and feedback for supporting Allwinner SoCs.
- Sakura286, exkc and Patola: Helped with RISC-V port with ssh access, ideas, testing, etc.
8. cpufetch for GPUs (gpufetch)
See gpufetch project!