Howto get hardware information in Linux using C++ Howto get hardware information in Linux using C++ linux linux

Howto get hardware information in Linux using C++


Nearly everything in your list has nothing to do with "specifications of hard disk":

  • The number of partitions depends on reading the partition table, and if you have any extended partitions, the partition tables of those partitions. The OS will usually do this bit for you when the device driver loads.
  • Partition information (namely the volume label) typically isn't available in the partition table. You need to guess the file system type and parse the file system header. The only thing in the partition table is the "type" byte, which doesn't tell you all that much, and the start/size.
  • Hard drives won't give you "real" CHS information. Additionally, the CHS information that the drive provides is "wrong" from the point of view of the BIOS (the BIOS does its own fudging).
  • Hard drives have a fixed sector size, which you can get with hd_driveid.sector_bytes (usually 512, but some modern drives use 4096). I'm not aware of a maximum "block size", which is a property of the filesystem. I'm also not sure why this is useful.
  • The total size in sectors is in hd_driveid.lba_capacity_2. Additionally, the size in bytes can probably be obtained with something like

    #define _FILE_OFFSET_BITS 64#include <sys/types.h>#include <unistd.h>...off_t size_in_bytes = lseek(device, 0, SEEK_END);if (size_in_bytes == (off_t)-1) { ... error, error code in ERRNO ... }

    Note that in both cases, it'll probably be a few megabytes bigger than sizes calculated by C×H×S.

It might help if you told us why you wanted this information...


//-------------------------------------------------// Without Boost LIB usage//-------------------------------------------------#include <sys/statvfs.h>#include <sys/sysinfo.h>//-------------------------------------------------stringstream   strStream;unsigned long  hdd_size;unsigned long  hdd_free;ostringstream  strConvert;//---struct sysinfo info;sysinfo( &info );   //---struct statvfs fsinfo;statvfs("/", &fsinfo);//---//---unsigned num_cpu = std::thread::hardware_concurrency();//---ifstream cpu_freq("/sys/devices/system/cpu/cpu0/cpufreq/cpuinfo_cur_freq");strStream << cpu_freq.rdbuf();std::string  cpufrequency = strStream.str();//---strStream.str("");ifstream cpu_temp("/sys/class/thermal/thermal_zone0/temp");strStream << cpu_temp.rdbuf();strConvert<< fixed << setprecision(2) << std::stof(strStream.str());std::string cputemp = strConvert.str();//---std::string   mem_size = to_string( (size_t)info.totalram *     (size_t)info.mem_unit );//---hdd_size = fsinfo.f_frsize * fsinfo.f_blocks;hdd_free = fsinfo.f_bsize * fsinfo.f_bfree;  //---                                                std::cout << "CPU core number           ==" << num_cpu       << endl;std::cout << "CPU core speed            ==" << cpufrequency  << endl;std::cout << "CPU temperature (C)       ==" << cputemp       << endl;//---std::cout << "Memory size               ==" << mem_size      << endl;//---std::cout << "Disk, filesystem size     ==" << hdd_size      << endl;std::cout << "Disk free space           ==" << hdd_free      << endl;//---


No, there is no platform-independent way. There is even no *nix way. There is just Linux way.

In Linux, all relevant information is available in various files in the /proc filesystem. The /proc/devices will tell you what devices there are (the files in /dev/ may exist even when the devices are not available, though opening them will fail in that case), /proc/partitions will tell you what partitions are available on each disk and than you'll have to look in the various subdirectories for the information. Just look around on some linux system where is what you need.