The Windows 10 task manager (taskmgr.exe) knows if it is running on a physical or virtual machine.
If you look in the Performance tab you'll notice that the number of processors label either reads Logical processors: or Virtual processors:.
In addition, if running inside a virtual machine, there is also the label Virtual machine: Yes.
See the following two screen shots:
My question is if there is a documented API call taskmgr is using to make this kind of detection?
I had a very short look at the disassembly and it seems that the detection code is somehow related to GetLogicalProcessorInformationEx and/or IsProcessorFeaturePresent and/or NtQuerySystemInformation.
However, I don't see how (at least not without spending some more hours of analyzing the assembly code).
And: This question is IMO not related to other existing questions like How can I detect if my program is running inside a virtual machine? since I did not see any code trying to compare smbios table strings or cpu vendor strings with existing known strings typical for hypervisors ("qemu", "virtualbox", "vmware"). I'm not ruling out that a lower level API implementation does that but I don't see this kind of code in taskmgr.exe.
Update: I can also rule out that taskmgr.exe is using the CPUID instruction (with EAX=1 and checking the hypervisor bit 31 in ECX) to detect a matrix.
Update: A closer look at the disassembly showed that there is indeed a check for bit 31, just not done that obviously.
I'll answer this question myself below.
CheckVirtualStatus()
uses CPUID for several detection tasks (e.g. signature, manufacturer ID string) but only once with EAX=1 and in that case only bit 5 of ECX is analyzed in order to check for the VMX extension. And a missing VMX flag is not a suitable indicator for a virtual machine.