Silicon-Info
arm64-to-sim
Silicon-Info | arm64-to-sim | |
---|---|---|
7 | 4 | |
279 | 508 | |
- | - | |
0.0 | 0.0 | |
over 3 years ago | 9 months ago | |
Swift | Swift | |
MIT License | MIT License |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
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For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
Silicon-Info
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How do I know if I am using the M1 version of a program and not the Intel version?
It's a free, open-source utility that someone has generously released to the public. I find it useful. I often install and run lots of different apps and open-source things, and sometimes it's convenient to be able to just look at an icon in the menu bar to confirm whether something is running under Rosetta or not. Other people find it useful too. Just because you don't have a use for it, doesn't mean nobody else in the world does either.
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Ask HN: How are you dealing with the M1/ARM migration?
> Curious to see what, if anything, is running under translation
There's a useful app called Silicon Info on Github (https://github.com/billycastelli/Silicon-Info) and also on the Mac App Store.
It adds a menu bar icon that switches according to the currently-focused app's architecture.
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nix-build unsupported system
{ pkgs ? import (fetchTarball "https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs-channels/archive/b58ada326aa612ea1e2fb9a53d550999e94f1985.tar.gz") {} }: pkgs.stdenv.mkDerivation rec { pname = "silicon-info"; version = "1.0.3"; src = pkgs.fetchurl { url = "https://github.com/billycastelli/Silicon-Info/releases/download/1.0.3/Silicon.Info.app.zip"; sha256 = "raa6RmXiqilz4vrvWfMSzIKuaJUFI2xMLUErw64Y0Pk="; }; installPhase = '' mkdir -p $out/Applications mv "Silicon Info.app" $out/Applications ''; meta = with pkgs.lib; { description = "Silicon Info is a tiny menu bar application allows the user to quickly view the architecture of the currently running application."; license = licenses.mit; homepage = "https://github.com/billycastelli/Silicon-Info"; platforms = platforms.darwin; }; }
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Welcome new Apple Silicon users! Check out my (tiny) menu bar app that displays if a running application is optimized for ARM
Of course, it is free and open source (check out the code on Github!).
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Common Questions about Apple Silicon - Does It ARM
If you already own an Apple Silicon Mac and want to know which apps are running natively as opposed to via Rosetta 2 translation, you can download Silicon Info and see a report of the apps
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Intel or Apple. Discover it directly using your MenuBar
I'm not sure OP is the developer, but moreso someone trying to just share.. mac app news. I feel the picture and description is self explanatory if you have one, but the full github release is here: https://github.com/billycastelli/Silicon-Info
arm64-to-sim
- I don't understand the different archs concept
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Does running Xcode using Rosetta make it slower?
If you really want to work around this and not use Rosetta, you can learn how to use lipo to get the slices you want, convert the object files, and recompile them into an xcframework. See this article for more info: https://bogo.wtf/arm64-to-sim.html
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Libraries compiled for arm64 doesn't necessarily mean it will run on M1 simulator, correct?
Technically they can run on m1, it’s just they are not recognised as binaries for m1 simulator. However, if you really want to do it then it’s possible to hack binary to work on simulator. You can look here for details: https://bogo.wtf/arm64-to-sim.html
- Ask HN: How are you dealing with the M1/ARM migration?
What are some alternatives?
doesitarm - 🦾 A list of reported app support for Apple Silicon as well as Apple M2 and M1 Ultra Macs
xcframework-maker - macOS utility for converting fat-frameworks to SPM-compatible XCFramework with arm64-simulator support
nixpkgs-channels - DEPRECATED! Use NixOS/nixpkgs repository instead.
buildx - Docker CLI plugin for extended build capabilities with BuildKit
CoolProp - Thermophysical properties for the masses
airbyte - The leading data integration platform for ETL / ELT data pipelines from APIs, databases & files to data warehouses, data lakes & data lakehouses. Both self-hosted and Cloud-hosted.
rosetta-cli - Easily switch & run commands on Intel/ARM modes in M1-powered Macs with Rosetta 2.
macpine - Lightweight Linux VMs on MacOS
swift-composable-architecture - A library for building applications in a consistent and understandable way, with composition, testing, and ergonomics in mind.
kaniko - Build Container Images In Kubernetes