Gpufetch Save

Simple yet fancy GPU architecture fetching tool

Project README

Simple yet fancy GPU architecture fetching tool

gpufetch is a command-line tool written in C++ that displays the GPU information in a clean and beautiful way

Table of contents

1. Support

gpufetch supports the following GPUs:

  • NVIDIA GPUs (Compute Capability >= 2.0)
  • Intel iGPUs (Generation >= Gen6)

Only compilation under Linux is supported.

2. Backends

gpufetch is made up of two backends:

  • CUDA backend
  • Intel backend

Backends are enabled and disabled at compile time. When compiling gpufetch, check the CMake output to see which backends are enabled.

gpufetch will only detect your GPU if the appropiate backend was enabled during compilation (e.g., will not detect your NVIDIA GPU if CUDA backend is disabled!)

By default, CMake will try to enable all backends. However, backends can be manually disabled. See the build.sh script for instructions.

2.1 CUDA backend is not enabled. Why?

CUDA is mandatory to build gpufetch with CUDA backend enabled. However, when building gpufetch, cmake may be unable to find the CUDA installation. If CUDA is installed but CMake does not find it, you need to pass the CUDA path to cmake. You can do this easily by editing directly the build.sh script. For example:

cmake -DCMAKE_CUDA_COMPILER=/usr/local/cuda/bin/nvcc -DCMAKE_CUDA_COMPILER_TOOLKIT_ROOT=/usr/local/cuda/ ..

2.2 The backend is enabled, but gpufetch is unable to detect my GPU

First, make sure that your GPU is enabled. You can print enabled GPUs with lspci:

[drnoob@noob ~]$ lspci -nn | grep VGA

If there is a NVIDIA GPU or Intel iGPU in the system and the appropiate backend is enabled but gpufetch does not detect the GPU, please create a new issue with the provided error message (in the gpufetch output) on the issues page.

3. Installation (building from source)

You will need (mandatory):

  • C++ compiler (e.g, g++)
  • zlib
  • cmake
  • make

and optionally:

  • CUDA (needed for CUDA backend)
  • pciutils (a local copy will be downloaded if pciutils is not installed)

To build gpufetch, just clone the repo and run ./build.sh:

git clone https://github.com/Dr-Noob/gpufetch
cd gpufetch
./build.sh
./gpufetch

4. Colors

By default, gpufetch will print the GPU logo with the system color scheme. However, you can set a custom color scheme in two different ways:

4.1 Specifying a name

By specifying a name, gpufetch will use the specific colors of each manufacture. Valid values are:

  • intel
  • nvidia
./gpufetch --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 GPU logo color (first 3 colors) and for the text colors (following 2).

./gpufetch --color 239,90,45:210,200,200:0,0,0:100,200,45:0,200,200

5. Bugs or improvements

See gpufetch contributing guidelines

Open Source Agenda is not affiliated with "Gpufetch" Project. README Source: Dr-Noob/gpufetch
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