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Stockfish

Stockfish

A free and strong UCI chess engine.
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Overview

Stockfish is a free and strong UCI chess engine derived from Glaurung 2.1 that analyzes chess positions and computes the optimal moves.

Stockfish does not include a graphical user interface (GUI) that is required to display a chessboard and to make it easy to input moves. These GUIs are developed independently from Stockfish and are available online. Read the documentation for your GUI of choice for information about how to use Stockfish with it.

See also the Stockfish documentation for further usage help.

Notes regarding this fork

This fork introduces support for native compilation of stockfish on windows using clang. No support for MSVC is intended. The C++ standard was bumped up to C++ 20 to avoid an issue with the llvm/clang immintrin.h header which on windows will not include certain subheaders. It appears that this issue will not be fixed. The other solution to this is not elegant and involves manually including missing subheaders. Because of the above a minimum of Clang 10 should work, though it is only tested with clang 17 and 18. Clang 9 and earlier used a different option to enable C++ 20 support so are sure not to work. Make needs to be installed on the system and be in PATH to compile the binary. The automatic determination of cpu features doesn't work on my system, I haven't looked into why yet. The compile command is:

  • make -j profile-build ARCH=YOUR-ARCH COMP=clang

You can use build instead of profile-build but this will make the binary slower. Run make with no target to see the available architectures. As this fork was made to increase the speed of the binary during native compilation, a defualt -march=native was added to the Makefile.

Files

This distribution of Stockfish consists of the following files:

  • README.md, the file you are currently reading.

  • Copying.txt, a text file containing the GNU General Public License version 3.

  • AUTHORS, a text file with the list of authors for the project.

  • src, a subdirectory containing the full source code, including a Makefile that can be used to compile Stockfish on Unix-like systems.

  • a file with the .nnue extension, storing the neural network for the NNUE evaluation. Binary distributions will have this file embedded.

Contributing

See Contributing Guide.

Donating hardware

Improving Stockfish requires a massive amount of testing. You can donate your hardware resources by installing the Fishtest Worker and viewing the current tests on Fishtest.

Improving the code

In the chessprogramming wiki, many techniques used in Stockfish are explained with a lot of background information. The section on Stockfish describes many features and techniques used by Stockfish. However, it is generic rather than focused on Stockfish's precise implementation.

The engine testing is done on Fishtest. If you want to help improve Stockfish, please read this guideline first, where the basics of Stockfish development are explained.

Discussions about Stockfish take place these days mainly in the Stockfish Discord server. This is also the best place to ask questions about the codebase and how to improve it.

Compiling Stockfish

Stockfish has support for 32 or 64-bit CPUs, certain hardware instructions, big-endian machines such as Power PC, and other platforms.

On Unix-like systems, it should be easy to compile Stockfish directly from the source code with the included Makefile in the folder src. In general, it is recommended to run make help to see a list of make targets with corresponding descriptions. An example suitable for most Intel and AMD chips:

cd src
make -j profile-build

Detailed compilation instructions for all platforms can be found in our documentation. Our wiki also has information about the UCI commands supported by Stockfish.

Terms of use

Stockfish is free and distributed under the GNU General Public License version 3 (GPL v3). Essentially, this means you are free to do almost exactly what you want with the program, including distributing it among your friends, making it available for download from your website, selling it (either by itself or as part of some bigger software package), or using it as the starting point for a software project of your own.

The only real limitation is that whenever you distribute Stockfish in some way, you MUST always include the license and the full source code (or a pointer to where the source code can be found) to generate the exact binary you are distributing. If you make any changes to the source code, these changes must also be made available under GPL v3.

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Native windows compile capability for Stockfish

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