Every CPU core shows up as a separate CPU under Linux. For those that have hyperthreaded processors, a single core processor will show up as two processors - assuming you have hyperthreading enabled.

linuxian iandsd wrote:

    "top" says asterisk 1.2.25 is using multiple cores:

    Cpu0  :  2.7% us,  9.3% sy,  0.0% ni, 87.7% id,  0.0% wa,  0.3%
    hi,  0.0% si
    Cpu1  :  1.7% us,  4.0% sy,  0.0% ni, 94.3% id,  0.0% wa,  0.0%
    hi,  0.0% si
    Cpu2  :  1.3% us,  4.3% sy,  0.0% ni, 94.3% id,  0.0% wa,  0.0%
    hi,  0.0% si
    Cpu3  :  1.3% us,  3.0% sy,  0.0% ni, 95.6% id,  0.0% wa,  0.0%
    hi,  0.0% si


is this multi-core ? I think its a multi-processor machine, and as i said I might be wrong simply because this bypasses by far my technical knowldge .. I m not a kernel developer after all. :)
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