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I ran a dual Intel Xeon X5680 on a recent Linux kernel and in procinfo it shows up as 4 cores/siblings per chip for a total of 8 cpus.
This is a surprise since the 5680 has 6 cores per chip, and 2 threads per core.
In contrast on another box with 4 core/2 thread Xeon X5500's procinfo shows 4 cores, 8 siblings per chip for a total 16 http://www.linuxforums.org/forum/# cpus.
Any idea whats going on here?
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Hi,
For better undestanding of the situation your system's having, please, provide more details:
1. What's the serverboard you're running the two Intel(R) Xeon(TM) Processor(s) X5680 on?
2. Just to be in sync., what do you mean by siblings? Are you referring to the threads?
3. I checked and there's no Intel(R) Xeon(TM) Processor X5500; see the following URL:
Hence, please, confirm on the model of this other Intel(R) Xeon(TM) Processor.
4. Have you run the http://downloadcenter.intel.com/Detail_Desc.aspx?agr=Y&DwnldID=7840&ProdId=1881&lang=eng Intel(R) Processor Identification Utility from DOS to see how the cores are being detected?
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My mistake, I jumped the gun on this. The test was inadvertently done on a 32bit Linux kernel. When we switched to the 64 bit Kernel /proc/cpuinfo shows 24 "processors" as I was expecting.

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