clinfo

打印系统中所有可用的 OpenCL 平台和设备的所有已知信息。「Print all known information about all available OpenCL platforms and devices in the system」

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What is this?

clinfo is a simple command-line application that enumerates all possible
(known) properties of the OpenCL platform and devices available on the
system.

Inspired by AMD's program of the same name, it is coded in pure C and it
tries to output all possible information, including those provided by
platform-specific extensions, trying not to crash on unsupported
properties (e.g. 1.2 properties on 1.1 platforms).

Usage

clinfo [options...]

Common used options are -l to show a synthetic summary of the
available devices (without properties), and -a, to try and show
properties even if clinfo would otherwise think they aren't supported
by the platform or device.

Refer to the man page for further information.

Use cases

  • verify that your OpenCL environment is set up correctly;
    if clinfo cannot find any platform or devices (or fails to load
    the OpenCL dispatcher library), chances are high no other OpenCL
    application will run;
  • verify that your OpenCL development environment is set up
    correctly: if clinfo fails to build, chances are high no
    other OpenCL application will build;
  • explore/report the actual properties of the available device(s).

Segmentation faults

Some faulty OpenCL platforms may cause clinfo to crash. There isn't
much clinfo itself can do about it, but you can try and isolate the
platform responsible for this. On POSIX systems, you can generally find
the platform responsible for the fault with the following one-liner:

find /etc/OpenCL/vendors/ -name '*.icd', while read OPENCL_VENDOR_PATH ; do clinfo -l > /dev/null ; echo "$? ${OPENCL_VENDOR_PATH}" ; done

Missing information

If you know of device properties that are exposed in OpenCL (either as core
properties or as extensions), but are not shown by clinfo, please open
an issue
providing as much
information as you can. Patches and pull requests accepted too.

Building

Building requires an OpenCL SDK (or at least OpenCL headers and
development files), and the standard build environment for the platform.
No special build system is used (autotools, CMake, meson, ninja, etc),
as I feel adding more dependencies for such a simple program would be
excessive. Simply running make at the project root should work.

Android support

Local build via Termux

One way to build the application on Android, pioneered by
truboxl and described here, requires the
installation of Termux, that can be installed via Google Play
as well as via F-Droid.

Inside Termux, you will first need to install some common tools:

pkg install git make clang -y

You will also need to clone the clinfo repository, and fetch the
OpenCL headers (we'll use the official KhronosGroup/OpenCL-Headers
repository for that):

git clone https://github.com/Oblomov/clinfo
git clone https://github.com/KhronosGroup/OpenCL-Headers

(I prefer doing this from a src directory I have created for
development, but as long as clinfo and OpenCL-Headers are sibling
directories, the headers will be found. If not, you will have to
override CPPFLAGS with e.g. export CPPFLAGS=-I/path/to/where/headers/are
before running make.
Of course /path/to/where/headers/are should be replaced with the actual
path to which the OpenCL-Headers repository was cloned.)

You can then cd clinfo and build the application. You can try simply
running make since Android should be autodetected now, buf it
this fails you can also force the detectio with

make OS=Android

If linking fails due to a missing libOpenCL.so, then your Android
machine probably doesn't support OpenCL. Otherwise, you should have a
working clinfo you can run. You will most probably need to set
LD_LIBRARY_PATH to let the program know where the OpenCL library is at
runtime: you will need at least ${ANDROID_ROOT}/vendor/lib64, but on
some machine the OpenCL library actually maps to a different library
(e.g., on one of my systems, it maps to the GLES library, which is in a
different subdirectory).

Due to this requirement, on Android the actual binary is now called
clinfo.real, and the produced clinfo is just a shell script that
will run the actual binary after setting LD_LIBRARY_PATH. If this
is not sufficient on your installation, please open an issue and we'll
try to improve the shell script to cover your use case as well.

Windows support

The application can usually be built in Windows too (support for which
required way more time than I should have spent, really, but I digress),
by running make in a Developer Command Prompt for Visual Studio,
provided an OpenCL SDK (such as the Intel or AMD one) is installed.

Precompiled Windows executable are available as artefacts of the
AppVeyor CI.

Main metrics

Overview
Name With OwnerOblomov/clinfo
Primary LanguageC
Program languageMakefile (Language Count: 5)
Platform
License:Other
所有者活动
Created At2013-06-06 11:18:09
Pushed At2025-06-24 17:48:42
Last Commit At2025-06-24 19:43:03
Release Count27
Last Release Name3.0.25.02.14 (Posted on 2025-02-14 17:39:13)
First Release Name1.2.14.7.9 (Posted on )
用户参与
Stargazers Count355
Watchers Count13
Fork Count82
Commits Count478
Has Issues Enabled
Issues Count80
Issue Open Count5
Pull Requests Count11
Pull Requests Open Count3
Pull Requests Close Count10
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