The trigger systems of the CERN LHC detectors play a crucial role in
determining the physics capabilities of the experiments. A reduction of several
orders of magnitude of the event rate is needed to reach values compatible with
the detector readout, offline storage and analysis capabilities. The CMS
experiment has been designed with a two-level trigger system: the Level 1 (L1)
Trigger, implemented on custom-designed electronics, and the High Level Trigger
(HLT), a streamlined version of the CMS reconstruction and analysis software
running on a computer farm. Here we will present the design and performance of
the main muon triggers used during the Run I data taking. We will show how
these triggers contributed to the 2012 physics results. We will then present
the improvements foreseen to meet the challenges of the Run II data taking. We
will discuss the improvements being made at L1, and at various stages in the
HLT reconstruction, ranging from the local drift tube and cathode strip chamber
reconstruction, to L2 muon tracks, to the final L3 muons.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures, Proceedings of the Second Annual Conference on
Large Hadron Collider Physics (LHCP 2014), June 2-7, 2014, New Yor