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1. Intel® FPGA SDK for OpenCL™ Pro Edition Getting Started Guide
2. Getting Started with the Intel® FPGA SDK for OpenCL™ Pro Edition for Windows
3. Getting Started with the Intel® FPGA SDK for OpenCL™ Pro Edition for Linux
A. Intel® FPGA SDK for OpenCL™ Pro Edition Getting Started Guide Archives
B. Document Revision History of the Intel® FPGA SDK for OpenCL™ Pro Edition Getting Started Guide
2.1. Downloading the Intel® FPGA SDK for OpenCL™ Pro Edition
2.2. Installing the Intel® FPGA SDK for OpenCL™ Pro Edition
2.3. Setting the Intel® FPGA SDK for OpenCL™ Pro Edition User Environment Variables
2.4. Verifying Software Installation
2.5. Installing an FPGA Board
2.6. Verifying Host Runtime Functionality via Emulation
2.7. Creating the FPGA Hardware Configuration File of an OpenCL Kernel
2.8. Updating the Hardware Image on the FPGA
2.9. Executing an OpenCL Kernel on an FPGA
2.10. Uninstalling an FPGA Board
2.11. Uninstalling the Software
3.1. Downloading the Intel® FPGA SDK for OpenCL™ Pro Edition
3.2. Installing the Intel® FPGA SDK for OpenCL™ Pro Edition
3.3. Setting the Intel® FPGA SDK for OpenCL™ Pro Edition User Environment Variables
3.4. Verifying Software Installation
3.5. Installing an FPGA Board
3.6. Verifying Host Runtime Functionality via Emulation
3.7. Creating the FPGA Hardware Configuration File of an OpenCL Kernel
3.8. Updating the Hardware Image on the FPGA
3.9. Executing an OpenCL Kernel on an FPGA
3.10. Uninstalling an FPGA Board
3.11. Uninstalling the Software
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2.8.1. Querying the Device Name of Your FPGA Board3.8.1. Querying the Device Name of Your FPGA Board
Some OpenCL™ software utility commands require you to specify the device name (<device_name>). The <device_name> refers to the acl number (e.g., acl0 to acl127) that corresponds to the FPGA device. When you query a list of accelerator boards, the OpenCL software produces a list of installed devices on your machine in the order of their device names.
To query a list of installed devices on your machine, type aocl diagnose at a command prompt.
The software generates an output that resembles the example shown below:
aocl diagnose: Running diagnostic from <board_package_path>/<board_name>/<platform>/libexec
Verified that the kernel mode driver is installed on the host machine.
Using board package from vendor: <board_vendor_name>
Querying information for all supported devices that are installed on the host machine ...
device_name Status Information
acl0 Passed <descriptive_board_name>
PCIe dev_id = <device_ID>, bus:slot.func = 02:00.00,
at Gen 2 with 8 lanes.
FPGA temperature = 43.0 degrees C.
acl1 Passed <descriptive_board_name>
PCIe dev_id = <device_ID>, bus:slot.func = 03:00.00,
at Gen 2 with 8 lanes.
FPGA temperature = 35.0 degrees C.
Found 2 active device(s) installed on the host machine, to perform a full diagnostic on a specific device, please run aocl diagnose <device_name>
DIAGNOSTIC_PASSED