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I would like to keep my .bashrc and .bash_login files in version control so that I can use them between all the computers I use. The problem is I have some OS specific aliases so I was looking for a way to determine if the script is running on OS X, Linux or Cygwin.

What is the proper way to detect the operating system in a bash script?

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7 Answers

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For my .bashrc, I use the following code:

platform='unknown'
unamestr=`uname`
if [[ "$unamestr" == 'Linux' ]]; then
   platform='linux'
elif [[ "$unamestr" == 'FreeBSD' ]]; then
   platform='freebsd'
fi

Then I do somethings like:

if [[ $platform == 'linux' ]]; then
   alias ls='ls --color=auto'
elif [[ $platform == 'freebsd' ]]; then
   alias ls='ls -G'
fi

It's ugly, but it works (you may use 'case' instead of 'if' if you prefer).

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Why do you set platform from unamestr, instead of just using unamestr? – fuzzymonk Dec 26 '08 at 22:14
I don't know if uname will always give me the same thing, so I make myself independant of its value. – Nicolas Martyanoff Dec 26 '08 at 23:19
While maybe not the most generic way, this is what I wound up using, so it gets my vote. Thanks Nic. – fuzzymonk Dec 27 '08 at 0:03
Don't use backticks, use the newer clearer syntax: "unamestr = $(uname)". – unwind Jan 14 at 11:38
vote up 8 vote down

The bash manpage says that the variable OSTYPE stores the name of the operation system:

OSTYPE Automatically set to a string that describes the operating system on which bash is executing. The default is system- dependent.

It is set to linux-gnu here.

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Also, $OSTYPE is 'darwin9.0' on my mac (Leopard) and 'cygwin' under Cygwin. – dF Dec 26 '08 at 20:33
In Debian Testing, $OSTYPE also contains linux-gnu. – Nick Presta Dec 27 '08 at 1:14
vote up 5 vote down

Try using "uname", for example in linux: "uname -a".

According to the manual page, uname conforms to SVr4 and POSIX, so it should be available on OSX and Cygwin too, but I can't confirm that.

BTW: $OSTYPE is also set to linux-gnu here :)

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Without parameters, uname prints 'Darwin' on Mac OS X (leopard). With -a it prints a whole lot of extra information (kernel version, architecture and something else I cannot decipher). I cannot test on cygwin – dribeas Dec 26 '08 at 20:51
vote up 3 vote down
uname

or

uname -a

if you want more information

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vote up 3 vote down

Detecting operating system and CPU type is not so easy to do portably. I have a sh script of about 100 lines that works across a very wide variety of Unix platforms: any system I have used since 1988.

The key elements are

  • uname -p is processor type but is usually unknown on modern Unix platforms.

  • uname -m will give the "machine hardware name" on some Unix systems.

  • /bin/arch, if it exists, will usually give the type of processor.

  • uname with no arguments will name the operating system.

Eventually you will have to think about the distinctions between platforms and how fine you want to make them. For example, just to keep things simple, I treat i386 through i686 , any "Pentium*" and any "AMD*Athlon*" all as x86.

My ~/.profile runs an a script at startup which sets one variable to a string indicating the combination of CPU and operating system. I have platform-specific bin, man, lib, and include directories that get set up based on that. Then I set a boatload of environment variables. So for example, a shell script to reformat mail can call, e.g., $LIB/mailfmt which is a platform-specific executable binary.

If you want to cut corners, uname -m and plain uname will tell you what you want to know on many platforms. Add other stuff when you need it. (And use case, not nesteed if!)

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vote up 3 vote down

In bash, use $OSTYPE and $HOSTTYPE, as documented; this is what I do. If that is not enough, and if even uname or uname -a (or other appropriate options) does not give enough information, there’s always the config.guess script from the GNU project, made exactly for this purpose.

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vote up 1 vote down

I know this question is a little stale, but I wrote a personal bash library and scripting framework that uses GNU shtool to do rather accurate platform detection.

http://www.gnu.org/software/shtool/

GNU shtool is a very portable set of scripts that contains, among other useful things, the 'shtool platform' command. Here is the output of:

shtool platform -v -F "%sc (%ac) %st (%at) %sp (%ap)"

on a few different machines:

OS X Leopard: 
    4.4BSD/Mach3.0 (iX86) Apple Darwin 9.6.0 (i386) Apple Mac OS X 10.5.6 (iX86)
Ubuntu Jaunty server:
    LSB (iX86) GNU/Linux 2.9/2.6 (i686) Ubuntu 9.04 (iX86)
Debian Lenny:
    LSB (iX86) GNU/Linux 2.7/2.6 (i686) Debian GNU/Linux 5.0 (iX86)

This produces pretty satisfactory results, as you can see. GNU shtool is a little slow, so I actually store and update the platform identification in a file on the system that my scripts call. It's my framework, so that works for me, but your mileage may vary.

Now, you'll have to find a way to package shtool with your scripts, but it's not a hard exercise. You can always fall back on uname output, also.

EDIT:

I missed the post by Teddy about config.guess (somehow). These are very similar scripts, but not the same. I personally use shtool for other uses as well, and it has been working quite well for me.

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