631

I would like to determine the operating system of the host that my Java program is running programmatically (for example: I would like to be able to load different properties based on whether I am on a Windows or Unix platform). What is the safest way to do this with 100% reliability?

22 Answers 22

730

You can use:

System.getProperty("os.name")

P.S. You may find this code useful:

class ShowProperties {
    public static void main(String[] args) {
        System.getProperties().list(System.out);
    }
}

All it does is print out all the properties provided by your Java implementations. It'll give you an idea of what you can find out about your Java environment via properties. :-)

2
197

As indicated in other answers, System.getProperty provides the raw data. However, the Apache Commons Lang component provides a wrapper for java.lang.System with handy properties like SystemUtils.IS_OS_WINDOWS, much like the aforementioned Swingx OS util.

0
104

Oct. 2008:

I would recommend to cache it in a static variable:

public static final class OsUtils
{
   private static String OS = null;
   public static String getOsName()
   {
      if(OS == null) { OS = System.getProperty("os.name"); }
      return OS;
   }
   public static boolean isWindows()
   {
      return getOsName().startsWith("Windows");
   }

   public static boolean isUnix() // and so on
}

That way, every time you ask for the Os, you do not fetch the property more than once in the lifetime of your application.


February 2016: 7+ years later:

There is a bug with Windows 10 (which did not exist at the time of the original answer).
See "Java's “os.name” for Windows 10?"

7
  • 6
    I agree with the getOSName function, on the basis of OAOO (once and only once); however, the caching is totally redundant given the speed of hash lookups. Oct 23, 2008 at 4:02
  • 7
    Totally redundant might be a bit harsh, hash lookups are more expensive than accessing a reference. It all depends on the context.
    – Craig Day
    Oct 23, 2008 at 4:04
  • 2
    Good points... Feel free to down-vote if you think it is a bad practice ;)
    – VonC
    Oct 23, 2008 at 4:10
  • 6
    I reread this answer. If you are going to cache, cache the values of isWindows, isUnix, etc. That way you save on the string comparison time also. Mar 19, 2015 at 14:48
  • 2
    @Brian True. I have edited this very old answer accordingly, to refer to the more recent one.
    – VonC
    Feb 7, 2016 at 20:18
57

some of the links in the answers above seem to be broken. I have added pointers to current source code in the code below and offer an approach for handling the check with an enum as an answer so that a switch statement can be used when evaluating the result:

OsCheck.OSType ostype=OsCheck.getOperatingSystemType();
switch (ostype) {
    case Windows: break;
    case MacOS: break;
    case Linux: break;
    case Other: break;
}

The helper class is:

/**
 * helper class to check the operating system this Java VM runs in
 *
 * please keep the notes below as a pseudo-license
 *
 * http://stackoverflow.com/questions/228477/how-do-i-programmatically-determine-operating-system-in-java
 * compare to http://svn.terracotta.org/svn/tc/dso/tags/2.6.4/code/base/common/src/com/tc/util/runtime/Os.java
 * http://www.docjar.com/html/api/org/apache/commons/lang/SystemUtils.java.html
 */
import java.util.Locale;
public static final class OsCheck {
  /**
   * types of Operating Systems
   */
  public enum OSType {
    Windows, MacOS, Linux, Other
  };

  // cached result of OS detection
  protected static OSType detectedOS;

  /**
   * detect the operating system from the os.name System property and cache
   * the result
   * 
   * @returns - the operating system detected
   */
  public static OSType getOperatingSystemType() {
    if (detectedOS == null) {
      String OS = System.getProperty("os.name", "generic").toLowerCase(Locale.ENGLISH);
      if ((OS.indexOf("mac") >= 0) || (OS.indexOf("darwin") >= 0)) {
        detectedOS = OSType.MacOS;
      } else if (OS.indexOf("win") >= 0) {
        detectedOS = OSType.Windows;
      } else if (OS.indexOf("nux") >= 0) {
        detectedOS = OSType.Linux;
      } else {
        detectedOS = OSType.Other;
      }
    }
    return detectedOS;
  }
}
2
  • 4
    (OS.indexOf("darwin") >= 0) can never be true because it comes after (OS.indexOf("win") >= 0)
    – William
    Dec 9, 2013 at 11:32
  • 23
    The code above may have locale issues, since it uses toLowerCase(), which is locale sensitive. Where this matters is particularly when converting i's to lower/upper case, since in Turkey, I becomes lower case undotted i (ı), and i becomes upper case dotted i (İ). So "WINDOWS".toLowerCase().indexOf("win") will return -1 in Turkey. Always pass a locale when doing a lower case of a particular language, ie "WINDOWS".toLowerCase(Locale.ENGLISH).indexOf("win") will work in Turkey. Jul 14, 2014 at 0:40
48

The following JavaFX classes have static methods to determine current OS (isWindows(),isLinux()...):

  • com.sun.javafx.PlatformUtil
  • com.sun.media.jfxmediaimpl.HostUtils
  • com.sun.javafx.util.Utils

Example:

if (PlatformUtil.isWindows()){
           ...
}
4
  • 5
    Please note that the access to "com/sun/javafx/*" is discouraged now (checked it with JDK 1.8.0_121). Jan 14, 2018 at 12:27
  • 1
    @MichaelMarton Have a reference for your statement? Jul 10, 2018 at 9:07
  • @HummelingEngineeringBV: I guess it was a mistake from my side. I am working with eclipse Neon 4.6.3 and the "Java Build Path" shows several "Discouraged: com/sun/javafx/**" warnings. However, as I found out, this happens to be an eclipse-bug and/or -feature (see link). Jul 11, 2018 at 11:01
  • 3
    I have to correct myself one more time. Beginning with Java 9/10+, several "com.sun.*" packages/APIs are about to be removed. Check out this link for more info. I actually stumbled over this because we use some of these packages. Migrating to eclipse 4.8/JDK 10, we now have to fix these and several other compiler errors due to missing references. Aug 16, 2018 at 20:00
47

TL;DR

For accessing OS use: System.getProperty("os.name").


But WAIT!!!

Why not create a utility class, make it reusable! And probably much faster on multiple calls. Clean, clear, faster!

Create a Util class for such utility functions. Then create public enums for each operating system type.

public class Util {     
        public enum OS {
            WINDOWS, LINUX, MAC, SOLARIS
        };// Operating systems.

    private static OS os = null;

    public static OS getOS() {
        if (os == null) {
            String operSys = System.getProperty("os.name").toLowerCase();
            if (operSys.contains("win")) {
                os = OS.WINDOWS;
            } else if (operSys.contains("nix") || operSys.contains("nux")
                    || operSys.contains("aix")) {
                os = OS.LINUX;
            } else if (operSys.contains("mac")) {
                os = OS.MAC;
            } else if (operSys.contains("sunos")) {
                os = OS.SOLARIS;
            }
        }
        return os;
    }
}

Now, you can easily invoke class from any class as follows,(P.S. Since we declared os variable as static, it will consume time only once to identify the system type, then it can be used until your application halts. )

            switch (Util.getOS()) {
            case WINDOWS:
                //do windows stuff
                break;
            case LINUX:

and That is it!

4
  • 5
    I want to use this piece of code in an open-source project (github.com/openhab/openhab-addons), is this okay with you?
    – Consti P
    Jan 11, 2020 at 20:29
  • 4
    Yes please feel free to use it.
    – Memin
    Jan 12, 2020 at 4:01
  • Why? It's not cleaner or clearer, and I doubt it's really much faster, either.
    – pabrams
    Mar 12, 2023 at 7:55
  • Go ahead and put rationale for why you said so. I am happy to change the code if you have any reasonable evidence... Be reasonable and clarify your comment please, so that I can improve my 7-8 years old answer...
    – Memin
    Mar 13, 2023 at 1:51
18

A small example of what you're trying to achieve would probably be a class similar to what's underneath:

import java.util.Locale;

public class OperatingSystem
{
    private static String OS = System.getProperty("os.name", "unknown").toLowerCase(Locale.ROOT);

    public static boolean isWindows()
    {
        return OS.contains("win");
    }

    public static boolean isMac()
    {
        return OS.contains("mac");
    }

    public static boolean isUnix()
    {
        return OS.contains("nux");
    }
}

This particular implementation is quite reliable and should be universally applicable. Just copy and paste it into your class of choice.

1
  • Why make it so complicated? System.getProperty("os.name") is sufficient. Don't bother with the unnecessary fluff.
    – pabrams
    Mar 12, 2023 at 7:57
12

Try this,simple and easy

System.getProperty("os.name");
System.getProperty("os.version");
System.getProperty("os.arch");
10

If you're interested in how an open source project does stuff like this, you can check out the Terracotta class (Os.java) that handles this junk here:

And you can see a similar class to handle JVM versions (Vm.java and VmVersion.java) here:

2
  • 2
    That Terracotta class is pretty comprehensive!
    – Stewart
    Jun 26, 2013 at 14:40
  • also suffers from the same issue identified by James Roper in Wolfgang Fahl's answer -- use of toLowerCase without specifying a locale
    – kbolino
    Mar 12, 2016 at 14:52
10

If you're working in a security sensitive environment, then please read this through.

Please refrain from ever trusting a property obtained via the System#getProperty(String) subroutine! Actually, almost every property including os.arch, os.name, and os.version isn't readonly as you'd might expect — instead, they're actually quite the opposite.

First of all, any code with sufficient permission of invoking the System#setProperty(String, String) subroutine can modify the returned literal at will. However, that's not necessarily the primary issue here, as it can be resolved through the use of a so called SecurityManager, as described in greater detail over here.

The actual issue is that any user is able to edit these properties when running the JAR in question (through -Dos.name=, -Dos.arch=, etc.). A possible way to avoid tampering with the application parameters is by querying the RuntimeMXBean as shown here. The following code snippet should provide some insight into how this may be achieved.

RuntimeMXBean runtimeMxBean = ManagementFactory.getRuntimeMXBean();
List<String> arguments = runtimeMxBean.getInputArguments();

for (String argument : arguments) {
    if (argument.startsWith("-Dos.name") {
        // System.getProperty("os.name") altered
    } else if (argument.startsWith("-Dos.arch") {
        // System.getProperty("os.arch") altered
    }
}
2
  • File.separator does not look like a serious solution. Is there any other way to do it?
    – Čamo
    Feb 25, 2021 at 10:27
  • Yes! There actually is quite an elegant way of detecting tampering with the system properties. I'll update the answer accordingly. But please be aware that a check can only do so much - if a person has physical access to your application, it will be possible to break it - no matter how sophisticated the check.
    – Theikon
    Feb 26, 2021 at 14:39
9

Below code shows the values that you can get from System API, these all things you can get through this API.

public class App {
    public static void main( String[] args ) {
        //Operating system name
        System.out.println(System.getProperty("os.name"));

        //Operating system version
        System.out.println(System.getProperty("os.version"));

        //Path separator character used in java.class.path
        System.out.println(System.getProperty("path.separator"));

        //User working directory
        System.out.println(System.getProperty("user.dir"));

        //User home directory
        System.out.println(System.getProperty("user.home"));

        //User account name
        System.out.println(System.getProperty("user.name"));

        //Operating system architecture
        System.out.println(System.getProperty("os.arch"));

        //Sequence used by operating system to separate lines in text files
        System.out.println(System.getProperty("line.separator"));

        System.out.println(System.getProperty("java.version")); //JRE version number

        System.out.println(System.getProperty("java.vendor.url")); //JRE vendor URL

        System.out.println(System.getProperty("java.vendor")); //JRE vendor name

        System.out.println(System.getProperty("java.home")); //Installation directory for Java Runtime Environment (JRE)

        System.out.println(System.getProperty("java.class.path"));

        System.out.println(System.getProperty("file.separator"));
    }
}

Answers:-

Windows 7
6.1
;
C:\Users\user\Documents\workspace-eclipse\JavaExample
C:\Users\user
user
amd64


1.7.0_71
http://java.oracle.com/
Oracle Corporation
C:\Program Files\Java\jre7
C:\Users\user\Documents\workspace-Eclipse\JavaExample\target\classes
\
9

I think following can give broader coverage in fewer lines

import org.apache.commons.exec.OS;

if (OS.isFamilyWindows()){
                //load some property
            }
else if (OS.isFamilyUnix()){
                //load some other property
            }

More details here: https://commons.apache.org/proper/commons-exec/apidocs/org/apache/commons/exec/OS.html

7

A bit shorter, cleaner (and eagerly computed) version of the top answers:

switch(OSType.DETECTED){
...
}

The helper enum:

public enum OSType {
    Windows, MacOS, Linux, Other;
    public static final  OSType DETECTED;
    static{
        String OS = System.getProperty("os.name", "generic").toLowerCase(Locale.ENGLISH);
        if ((OS.contains("mac")) || (OS.contains("darwin"))) {
            DETECTED = OSType.MacOS;
        } else if (OS.contains("win")) {
            DETECTED = OSType.Windows;
        } else if (OS.contains("nux")) {
            DETECTED = OSType.Linux;
        } else {
            DETECTED = OSType.Other;
        }
    }
}
1
  • The answer is just System.getProperty("os.name"). Nobody wants to do all this extra work. Why bother?
    – pabrams
    Mar 12, 2023 at 7:56
6

I find that the OS Utils from Swingx does the job.

5
5
String osName = System.getProperty("os.name");
System.out.println("Operating system " + osName);
3

I liked Wolfgang's answer, just because I believe things like that should be consts...

so I've rephrased it a bit for myself, and thought to share it :)

/**
 * types of Operating Systems
 *
 * please keep the note below as a pseudo-license
 *
 * helper class to check the operating system this Java VM runs in
 * http://stackoverflow.com/questions/228477/how-do-i-programmatically-determine-operating-system-in-java
 * compare to http://svn.terracotta.org/svn/tc/dso/tags/2.6.4/code/base/common/src/com/tc/util/runtime/Os.java
 * http://www.docjar.com/html/api/org/apache/commons/lang/SystemUtils.java.html
 */
public enum OSType {
    MacOS("mac", "darwin"),
    Windows("win"),
    Linux("nux"),
    Other("generic");

    private static OSType detectedOS;

    private final String[] keys;

    private OSType(String... keys) {
        this.keys = keys;
    }

    private boolean match(String osKey) {
        for (int i = 0; i < keys.length; i++) {
            if (osKey.indexOf(keys[i]) != -1)
                return true;
        }
        return false;
    }

    public static OSType getOS_Type() {
        if (detectedOS == null)
            detectedOS = getOperatingSystemType(System.getProperty("os.name", Other.keys[0]).toLowerCase());
        return detectedOS;
    }

    private static OSType getOperatingSystemType(String osKey) {
        for (OSType osType : values()) {
            if (osType.match(osKey))
                return osType;
        }
        return Other;
    }
}
4
  • It seems like "darwin" can never be matched because checking "win" would already cause Windows to be returned.
    – tvkanters
    Mar 29, 2014 at 11:54
  • see fix in my original answer Jun 8, 2014 at 12:20
  • 3
    Congratulations, you've reimplemented sun.awt.OSInfo#getOSType :) Jan 22, 2016 at 15:44
  • 1
    HHHHH... good one... @Kirill Gamazkov I didn't find it back then.. thanks for pointing it out
    – TacB0sS
    Apr 27, 2018 at 20:13
3

You can just use sun.awt.OSInfo#getOSType() method

3
  • This should be the best answer! I was just checking if someone already has mentioned this over here. Aug 23, 2018 at 17:14
  • Any workaround for this being 'restricted API'? I'd like to try using this but it gives me that warning in Eclipse. I can use an older jre (e.g. jre1.8.0_171), but the latest 1.8 jres have it marked as restricted. May 7, 2020 at 16:50
  • Whole 'sun' package is deprecated, I can't imagine how one could workaround this. Seems that it's just System.getProperty("os.name") and then checks if the property contains 'Windows', 'Linux', 'Solaris' or 'OS X', so it's basically the same as Vishal Chaudhari's answer Jul 23, 2020 at 11:26
2

This code for displaying all information about the system os type,name , java information and so on.

public static void main(String[] args) {
    // TODO Auto-generated method stub
    Properties pro = System.getProperties();
    for(Object obj : pro.keySet()){
        System.out.println(" System  "+(String)obj+"     :  "+System.getProperty((String)obj));
    }
}
0

In com.sun.jna.Platform class you can find useful static methods like

Platform.isWindows();
Platform.is64Bit();
Platform.isIntel();
Platform.isARM();

and much more.

If you use Maven just add dependency

<dependency>
 <groupId>net.java.dev.jna</groupId>
 <artifactId>jna</artifactId>
 <version>5.2.0</version>
</dependency>

Otherwise just find jna library jar file (ex. jna-5.2.0.jar) and add it to classpath.

-1

Just use com.sun.javafx.util.Utils as below.

if ( Utils.isWindows()){
     // LOGIC HERE
}

OR USE

boolean isWindows = OSInfo.getOSType().equals(OSInfo.OSType.WINDOWS);
       if (isWindows){
         // YOUR LOGIC HERE
       }
-1

Since google points "kotlin os name" to this page, here's the Kotlin version of @Memin 's answer:

private var _osType: OsTypes? = null
val osType: OsTypes
    get() {
        if (_osType == null) {
            _osType = with(System.getProperty("os.name").lowercase(Locale.getDefault())) {
                if (contains("win"))
                    OsTypes.WINDOWS
                else if (listOf("nix", "nux", "aix").any { contains(it) })
                    OsTypes.LINUX
                else if (contains("mac"))
                    OsTypes.MAC
                else if (contains("sunos"))
                    OsTypes.SOLARIS
                else
                    OsTypes.OTHER
            }
        }
        return _osType!!
    }

enum class OsTypes {
    WINDOWS, LINUX, MAC, SOLARIS, OTHER
}
-2

For getting OS name, simply use:

Platform.getOS()

Lets say you want to see if platform is linux:

if (Platform.getOS().equals(Platform.OS_LINUX)) {
}

Similarly Platform class have defined constants for others operating system names. Platform class is part of org.eclipse.core.runtime package.

2
  • 1
    Which package / jar contains this class?
    – DuncG
    Apr 20, 2022 at 11:49
  • org.eclipse.core.runtime Apr 20, 2022 at 21:03

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