under an intel I know I can look at the outcome of uname -m to know if my OS is 32 or 64 bit, but under ARM this gives:
armv7l
I deduced from
file /usr/bin/ls
that I'm on a 32-bit OS, but how can I know this in an easier way?
under an intel I know I can look at the outcome of uname -m to know if my OS is 32 or 64 bit, but under ARM this gives:
armv7l
I deduced from
file /usr/bin/ls
that I'm on a 32-bit OS, but how can I know this in an easier way?
There are several gradations, since you can run a 32-bit or mixed operating system on a 64-bit-capable CPU. See 64-bit kernel, but all 32-bit ELF executable running processes, how is this? for a detailed discussion (written for x86, but most of it applies to arm as well).
You can find the processor model in /proc/cpuinfo. For example:
$ cat /proc/cpuinfo
Processor : ARMv7 Processor rev 10 (v7l)
ARMv7 (and below) is 32-bit. ARMv8 introduces the 64-bit instruction set.
If you want to see whether your system supports 64-bit binaries, check the kernel architecture:
$ uname -m
armv7l
On a 64-bit processor, you'd see a string starting with armv8 (or above) if the uname process itself is a 32-bit process, or aarch64 if it's a 64-bit process. (See also https://stackoverflow.com/questions/45125516/possible-values-for-uname-m)
As richard points out, armv7 variants are all 32-bit, so there is no redundant label armv7-32, etc.
On a linux system, you can easily, although not truly definitively, check by examining a common executable:
> which bash
/bin/bash
> file /bin/bash
/bin/bash: ELF 32-bit LSB executable, ARM, version 1 (SYSV) ...
I say "not definitively" because it is possible to run 32-bit executables on a 64-bit system.
There does not appear to be anything foolproof in /proc or /sys; the output from /proc/cpuinfo may provide some significant clues. If for some reason you need an automated check, creating a table mapped to the "model name" field seems like one potentially sound method (other fields, including "model", "cpu family", etc. look optional -- they don't appear at all for me on a Broadcom 2708 ARMv6 processor).
Install the 'lshw' package.
# lshw
...
description: Computer
product: Raspberry Pi 3 Model B Rev 1.2
width: 32 bits
...
Seems like most ways to see bit count is to somehow know that arm7=32 bit and while that may be true but what about
pi@rpi9:~ $ getconf LONG_BIT
32
And if you want to look for the cpu model I normally use arch
root@rpi4:~# tr '\0' '\n' </proc/device-tree/model;arch
Raspberry Pi Model B Rev 2
armv6l
pi@rpi9:~ $ tr '\0' '\n' </proc/device-tree/model;arch
Raspberry Pi 3 Model B Rev 1.2
armv7l
Try the following.
// -*- compile-command: "gcc -Wall -o sizeof sizeof.c && ./sizeof" -*-
#include <stdio.h>
#include <limits.h>
#define size(t) { t x; printf("%s:\t%3lu bit\n", #t, CHAR_BIT * sizeof x); }
int main (int argc, char *argv[])
{
size(char);
size(short);
size(int);
size(long);
size(void*);
return 0;
}
The address size is void*.
Nope it's a 64-bit computer. It's an Allwinner H8, witch is a double ARM-7. 8 cores, 64 bits, powervr, sgx 544, at double speed (700mhz).
So no, it's capable of being 64 bit. Just the OS might be 32.