Like you've said CPU Id wont be unique, however you can use it with another hardware identifier to create your own unique key.
Reference assembly System.Management
So, use this code to get the CPU ID:
string cpuInfo = string.Empty;
ManagementClass mc = new ManagementClass("win32_processor");
ManagementObjectCollection moc = mc.GetInstances();
foreach (ManagementObject mo in moc)
{
cpuInfo = mo.Properties["processorID"].Value.ToString();
break;
}
Then use this code to get the HD ID:
string drive = "C";
ManagementObject dsk = new ManagementObject(
@"win32_logicaldisk.deviceid=""" + drive + @":""");
dsk.Get();
string volumeSerial = dsk["VolumeSerialNumber"].ToString();
Then, you can just combine these two serials to get a uniqueId for that machine:
string uniqueId = cpuInfo + volumeSerial;
Obviously, the more hardware components you get the IDs of, the greater the uniqueness becomes. However, the chances of the same machine having an identical CPU serial and Hard disk serial are already slim to none.
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