AbstractThe Compact Muon Solenoid (CMS) experiment at the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) has been collecting data at center-of-mass energy 7 TeV since March 2010. CMS detects the products of LHC proton beams colliding at a rate of 40MHz. The Level-1 trigger reduces this collision rate to an output rate of 100kHz, which is forwarded to the High-Level trigger, a dedicated computer farm, which reduces that further to a rate of a few hundreds of Hz, suitable for storage of full event data. The Level-1 trigger uses high-speed custom electronics to combine information from electromagnetic and hadronic calorimeters and three muon detection systems and identifies potential physics objects of interest in only a few microseconds. To ensure good performa...