What do I need to look at to see whether I'm on Windows or Unix, etc.?
28 Answers
>>> import os
>>> os.name
'posix'
>>> import platform
>>> platform.system()
'Linux'
>>> platform.release()
'2.6.22-15-generic'
The output of platform.system()
is as follows:
- Linux:
Linux
- Mac:
Darwin
- Windows:
Windows
See: platform
— Access to underlying platform’s identifying data
-
67
-
95@matth Slightly more consistent output. i.e.
platform.system()
returns"Windows"
instead of"win32"
.sys.platform
also contains"linux2"
on old versions of Python while it contains just"linux"
on newer ones.platform.system()
has always returned just"Linux"
.– erbCommented Jun 9, 2017 at 10:22 -
12On mac os X, platform.system() always return "Darwin"? or is there other case possible? Commented Jan 12, 2018 at 13:35
-
10@baptistechéné, I know this has over an year since you asked, but as a comment won't hurt, I'll post it anyways :) So, the reason behind it is because it shows the kernel name. The same way Linux (the kernel) distros have many names (Ubuntu, Arch, Fedora among others), but it'll present itself as the kernel name, Linux. Darwin (a BSD-based Kernel), has its surrounding system, the macOS. I'm pretty sure apple did release Darwin as an open source code, but there's no other distro running over Darwin that I know of. Commented Jan 30, 2019 at 12:05
-
4@TooroSan
os.uname()
only exists for Unix systems. The Python 3 docs: docs.python.org/3/library/os.htmlAvailability: recent flavors of Unix.
Commented Mar 22, 2020 at 21:49
Here are the system results for Windows Vista!
>>> import os
>>> os.name
'nt'
>>> import platform
>>> platform.system()
'Windows'
>>> platform.release()
'Vista'
And for Windows 10:
>>> import os
>>> os.name
'nt'
>>> import platform
>>> platform.system()
'Windows'
>>> platform.release()
'10'
-
9
-
5So, yeah, I just ran
platform.release()
on my Windows 10, and it definitely just gave me'8'
. Maybe I installed python before upgrading, but really?? Commented Jun 8, 2017 at 13:35 -
4I'd have thought it's more likely you upgraded from Windows 8 (vs. it being a clean install) and whatever Python looks up in the registry or whatever was left behind?– OJFordCommented Jan 30, 2018 at 20:53
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8The release lookup for python on Windows appears to use the Win32 api function GetVersionEx at its core. The notes at the top of this Microsoft article about that function could be relevant: msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/windows/desktop/… Commented Mar 22, 2018 at 20:13
For the record, here are the results on Mac:
>>> import os
>>> os.name
'posix'
>>> import platform
>>> platform.system()
'Darwin'
>>> platform.release()
'8.11.1'
-
4On macOS Catalina 10.15.2,
platform.release()
returns'19.2.0'
– user3064538Commented Dec 27, 2019 at 4:55 -
2
19.2.0
is the release version of Darwin that comes with Catalina 10.15.2: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MacOS_Catalina#Release_history– philshemCommented Aug 21, 2020 at 13:28
Short Story
Use platform.system()
. It returns Windows
, Linux
or Darwin
(for OS X).
Long Story
There are three ways to get the OS in Python, each with its own pro and cons:
Method 1
>>> import sys
>>> sys.platform
'win32' # could be 'linux', 'linux2, 'darwin', 'freebsd8' etc
How this works (source): Internally it calls OS APIs to get the name of the OS as defined by the OS. See here for various OS-specific values.
Pro: No magic, low level.
Con: OS version dependent, so best not to use directly.
Method 2
>>> import os
>>> os.name
'nt' # for Linux and Mac it prints 'posix'
How this works (source): Internally it checks if Python has OS-specific modules called posix or nt.
Pro: Simple to check if it is a POSIX OS
Con: no differentiation between Linux or OS X.
Method 3
>>> import platform
>>> platform.system()
'Windows' # For Linux it prints 'Linux'. For Mac, it prints `'Darwin'
How this works (source): Internally it will eventually call internal OS APIs, get the OS version-specific name, like 'win32' or 'win16' or 'linux1' and then normalize to more generic names like 'Windows' or 'Linux' or 'Darwin' by applying several heuristics.
Pro: The best portable way for Windows, OS X, and Linux.
Con: Python folks must keep normalization heuristic up to date.
Summary
- If you want to check if OS is Windows or Linux, or OS X, then the most reliable way is
platform.system()
. - If you want to make OS-specific calls, but via built-in Python modules
posix
ornt
, then useos.name
. - If you want to get the raw OS name as supplied by the OS itself, then use
sys.platform
.
-
10So much for "There should be one (and preferably only one) way to do things". However I believe this is the right answer. You would need to compare with titled OS names but it's not such an issue and will be more portable. Commented Apr 13, 2020 at 10:00
-
2Note that in Python 3.10 ,
platform.system
defaults tosys.platform
if theos.uname
throws an exception: github.com/python/cpython/blob/… Commented Aug 23, 2022 at 15:58
Sample code to differentiate operating systems using Python:
import sys
if sys.platform.startswith("linux"): # could be "linux", "linux2", "linux3", ...
# linux
elif sys.platform == "darwin":
# MAC OS X
elif os.name == "nt":
# Windows, Cygwin, etc. (either 32-bit or 64-bit)
-
10For fuzzier results, ``_platform.startswith('linux') Commented Feb 8, 2016 at 3:51
-
4
-
8Little problem:
win64
does not exis: github.com/python/cpython/blob/master/Lib/platform.py. All Windows versions arewin32
. Commented Oct 9, 2020 at 13:52 -
2
I started a bit more systematic listing of what values you can expect using the various modules:
Linux (64 bit) + WSL
x86_64 aarch64
------ -------
os.name posix posix
sys.platform linux linux
platform.system() Linux Linux
sysconfig.get_platform() linux-x86_64 linux-aarch64
platform.machine() x86_64 aarch64
platform.architecture() ('64bit', '') ('64bit', 'ELF')
- I tried with Arch Linux and Linux Mint, but I got the same results
- on Python 2,
sys.platform
is suffixed by the kernel version, e.g.,linux2
, and everything else stays identical - the same output on Windows Subsystem for Linux (I tried with Ubuntu 18.04 (Bionic Beaver) LTS), except
platform.architecture() = ('64bit', 'ELF')
Windows (64 bit)
(with 32-bit column running in the 32-bit subsystem)
Official Python installer 64 bit 32 bit
------------------------- ----- -----
os.name nt nt
sys.platform win32 win32
platform.system() Windows Windows
sysconfig.get_platform() win-amd64 win32
platform.machine() AMD64 AMD64
platform.architecture() ('64bit', 'WindowsPE') ('64bit', 'WindowsPE')
msys2 64 bit 32 bit
----- ----- -----
os.name posix posix
sys.platform msys msys
platform.system() MSYS_NT-10.0 MSYS_NT-10.0-WOW
sysconfig.get_platform() msys-2.11.2-x86_64 msys-2.11.2-i686
platform.machine() x86_64 i686
platform.architecture() ('64bit', 'WindowsPE') ('32bit', 'WindowsPE')
msys2 mingw-w64-x86_64-python3 mingw-w64-i686-python3
----- ------------------------ ----------------------
os.name nt nt
sys.platform win32 win32
platform.system() Windows Windows
sysconfig.get_platform() mingw mingw
platform.machine() AMD64 AMD64
platform.architecture() ('64bit', 'WindowsPE') ('32bit', 'WindowsPE')
Cygwin 64 bit 32 bit
------ ----- -----
os.name posix posix
sys.platform cygwin cygwin
platform.system() CYGWIN_NT-10.0 CYGWIN_NT-10.0-WOW
sysconfig.get_platform() cygwin-3.0.1-x86_64 cygwin-3.0.1-i686
platform.machine() x86_64 i686
platform.architecture() ('64bit', 'WindowsPE') ('32bit', 'WindowsPE')
Some remarks:
- there is also
distutils.util.get_platform()
which is identical to `sysconfig.get_platform - Anaconda on Windows is the same as the official Python Windows installer
- I don't have a Mac nor a true 32-bit system and was not motivated to do it online
To compare with your system, simply run this script:
from __future__ import print_function
import os
import sys
import platform
import sysconfig
print("os.name ", os.name)
print("sys.platform ", sys.platform)
print("platform.system() ", platform.system())
print("sysconfig.get_platform() ", sysconfig.get_platform())
print("platform.machine() ", platform.machine())
print("platform.architecture() ", platform.architecture())
-
On latest MSYS2, MinGW64 reports
sys.platform
aswin32
like your reported, but MSYS2 and UCRT64 reportcygwin
but notmsys
.– PaebbelsCommented Jan 8, 2022 at 18:52
You can also use sys.platform
if you already have imported sys
and you don't want to import another module
>>> import sys
>>> sys.platform
'linux2'
-
Does on of the approaches have any advantages, besides having to or not to import another module?– matthCommented Nov 7, 2016 at 14:41
-
Scoping is the main advantage. You want as few global variable names as possible. When you already have "sys" as a global name, you shouldn't add another one. But if you don't use "sys" yet, using "_platform" might be more descriptive and less likely to collide with another meaning. Commented Dec 21, 2016 at 9:01
If you want user readable data, but still detailed, you can use platform.platform():
>>> import platform
>>> platform.platform()
'Linux-3.3.0-8.fc16.x86_64-x86_64-with-fedora-16-Verne'
Here are a few different possible calls you can make to identify where you are. linux_distribution and dist are removed in recent Python versions.
import platform
import sys
def linux_distribution():
try:
return platform.linux_distribution()
except:
return "N/A"
def dist():
try:
return platform.dist()
except:
return "N/A"
print("""Python version: %s
dist: %s
linux_distribution: %s
system: %s
machine: %s
platform: %s
uname: %s
version: %s
mac_ver: %s
""" % (
sys.version.split('\n'),
str(dist()),
linux_distribution(),
platform.system(),
platform.machine(),
platform.platform(),
platform.uname(),
platform.version(),
platform.mac_ver(),
))
The outputs of this script ran on a few different systems (Linux, Windows, Solaris, and macOS) and architectures (x86, x64, Itanium, PowerPC, and SPARC) is available at OS_flavor_name_version.
Ubuntu 12.04 server (Precise Pangolin), for example, gives:
Python version: ['2.6.5 (r265:79063, Oct 1 2012, 22:04:36) ', '[GCC 4.4.3]']
dist: ('Ubuntu', '10.04', 'lucid')
linux_distribution: ('Ubuntu', '10.04', 'lucid')
system: Linux
machine: x86_64
platform: Linux-2.6.32-32-server-x86_64-with-Ubuntu-10.04-lucid
uname: ('Linux', 'xxx', '2.6.32-32-server', '#62-Ubuntu SMP Wed Apr 20 22:07:43 UTC 2011', 'x86_64', '')
version: #62-Ubuntu SMP Wed Apr 20 22:07:43 UTC 2011
mac_ver: ('', ('', '', ''), '')
-
2
DeprecationWarning: dist() and linux_distribution() functions are deprecated in Python 3.5
– user3064538Commented Dec 27, 2019 at 4:57
Use:
import psutil
psutil.MACOS # True ("OSX" is deprecated)
psutil.WINDOWS # False
psutil.LINUX # False
This would be the output if I was using macOS.
-
13
Returns the system/OS name, such as 'Linux', 'Darwin', 'Java', 'Windows'. An empty string is returned if the value cannot be determined.
import platform
system = platform.system().lower()
is_windows = system == 'windows'
is_linux = system == 'linux'
is_mac = system == 'darwin'
-
How can I get the name of my distro? For example, if I'm running Arch, how can I get
Arch
?– dioCommented Jul 25, 2021 at 17:30
I am using the WLST tool that comes with WebLogic, and it doesn't implement the platform package.
wls:/offline> import os
wls:/offline> print os.name
java
wls:/offline> import sys
wls:/offline> print sys.platform
'java1.5.0_11'
Apart from patching the system javaos.py (issue with os.system() on Windows Server 2003 with JDK 1.5) (which I can't do, I have to use WebLogic out of the box), this is what I use:
def iswindows():
os = java.lang.System.getProperty( "os.name" )
return "win" in os.lower()
For Jython the only way to get the OS name I found is to check the os.name
Java property (I tried with sys
, os
and platform
modules for Jython 2.5.3 on Windows XP):
def get_os_platform():
"""return platform name, but for Jython it uses os.name Java property"""
ver = sys.platform.lower()
if ver.startswith('java'):
import java.lang
ver = java.lang.System.getProperty("os.name").lower()
print('platform: %s' % (ver))
return ver
-
You can also call "platform.java_ver()" to extract OS information in Jython.– DocOcCommented Oct 3, 2018 at 16:08
Watch out if you're on Windows with Cygwin where os.name
is posix
.
>>> import os, platform
>>> print os.name
posix
>>> print platform.system()
CYGWIN_NT-6.3-WOW
-
Why watch out? Can you elaborate? Preferably in the answer. (But ********* ********* ********* WITHOUT ********* ********* ********* "Edit:", "Update:", or similar - the answer should appear as if it was written today). Commented Mar 25, 2023 at 18:15
#!/usr/bin/python3.2
def cls():
from subprocess import call
from platform import system
os = system()
if os == 'Linux':
call('clear', shell = True)
elif os == 'Windows':
call('cls', shell = True)
-
5Welcome on SO, here, it is a good practice to explain why to use your solution and not just how. That will make your answer more valuable and help further reader to have a better understanding of how you do it. I also suggest that you have a look on our FAQ : stackoverflow.com/faq. Commented Nov 9, 2012 at 22:03
-
Good answer, maybe even on par with the original answer. But you could explain why.– vgoffCommented Nov 9, 2012 at 22:04
Here is an easy and simple-to-understand Pythonic way to detect the OS in code. It was tested on Python 3.7.
from sys import platform
class UnsupportedPlatform(Exception):
pass
if "linux" in platform:
print("linux")
elif "darwin" in platform:
print("mac")
elif "win" in platform:
print("windows")
else:
raise UnsupportedPlatform
-
6If this code is ever refactored by someone not understanding the structure of the if, this could lead to a false detection of macos because
win
is included indarwin
. Astartswidth
would be less problematic.– cansikCommented Dec 25, 2021 at 17:42 -
If you are refactoring code and you haven't mastered If statements you probably have bigger fish to fry.– robmsmtCommented Jan 2, 2022 at 17:33
-
If possible, changing an if branch should not lead to a false positive. This concept is called clean code.– cansikCommented Jan 4, 2022 at 14:06
If you not looking for the kernel version, etc., but looking for the Linux distribution, you may want to use the following.
In Python 2.6 and later:
>>> import platform
>>> print platform.linux_distribution()
('CentOS Linux', '6.0', 'Final')
>>> print platform.linux_distribution()[0]
CentOS Linux
>>> print platform.linux_distribution()[1]
6.0
In Python 2.4:
>>> import platform
>>> print platform.dist()
('centos', '6.0', 'Final')
>>> print platform.dist()[0]
centos
>>> print platform.dist()[1]
6.0
Obviously, this will work only if you are running this on Linux. If you want to have a more generic script across platforms, you can mix this with code samples given in other answers.
Try this:
import os
os.uname()
And you can make it:
info = os.uname()
info[0]
info[1]
-
4Also
os.uname()
is not available on windows: docs.python.org/2/library/os.html#os.uname Availability: recent flavors of Unix.– ccpizzaCommented Oct 24, 2017 at 20:26
You can also use only the platform module without importing the os module to get all the information.
>>> import platform
>>> platform.os.name
'posix'
>>> platform.uname()
('Darwin', 'mainframe.local', '15.3.0', 'Darwin Kernel Version 15.3.0: Thu Dec 10 18:40:58 PST 2015; root:xnu-3248.30.4~1/RELEASE_X86_64', 'x86_64', 'i386')
A nice and tidy layout for reporting purpose can be achieved using this line:
for i in zip(['system', 'node', 'release', 'version', 'machine', 'processor'], platform.uname()):print i[0], ':', i[1]
That gives this output:
system : Darwin
node : mainframe.local
release : 15.3.0
version : Darwin Kernel Version 15.3.0: Thu Dec 10 18:40:58 PST 2015; root:xnu-3248.30.4~1/RELEASE_X86_64
machine : x86_64
processor : i386
Usually the operating system version is missing, but you should know if you are running Windows, Linux or Mac, a platform-independent way is to use this test:
In []: for i in [platform.linux_distribution(), platform.mac_ver(), platform.win32_ver()]:
....: if i[0]:
....: print 'Version: ', i[0]
In the same vein....
import platform
is_windows = (platform.system().lower().find("win") > -1)
if(is_windows):
lv_dll = LV_dll("my_so_dll.dll")
else:
lv_dll = LV_dll("./my_so_dll.so")
-
15This is problematic if you are on a Mac since platform.system() returns "Darwin" on a Mac and "Darwin".lower().find("win") = 3.– mishaFCommented Apr 19, 2013 at 15:10
-
is_windows = platform.system().lower().startswith("win") or False Commented Mar 29, 2018 at 2:05
Check the available tests with module platform and print the answer out for your system:
import platform
print dir(platform)
for x in dir(platform):
if x[0].isalnum():
try:
result = getattr(platform, x)()
print "platform." + x + ": " + result
except TypeError:
continue
This solution works for both Python and Jython.
module os_identify.py:
import platform
import os
# This module contains functions to determine the basic type of
# OS we are running on.
# Contrary to the functions in the `os` and `platform` modules,
# these allow to identify the actual basic OS,
# no matter whether running on the `python` or `jython` interpreter.
def is_linux():
try:
platform.linux_distribution()
return True
except:
return False
def is_windows():
try:
platform.win32_ver()
return True
except:
return False
def is_mac():
try:
platform.mac_ver()
return True
except:
return False
def name():
if is_linux():
return "Linux"
elif is_windows():
return "Windows"
elif is_mac():
return "Mac"
else:
return "<unknown>"
Use like this:
import os_identify
print "My OS: " + os_identify.name()
If you are running Mac OS X and run platform.system()
you get Darwin, because Mac OS X is built on Apple's Darwin OS. Darwin is the kernel of Mac OS X and is essentially Mac OS X without the GUI.
Use a simple Enum implementation like the following. There isn't any need for external libraries!
import platform
from enum import Enum
class OS(Enum):
def checkPlatform(osName):
return osName.lower() == platform.system().lower()
MAC = checkPlatform("darwin")
LINUX = checkPlatform("linux")
WINDOWS = checkPlatform("windows") # I haven't tested this one
Simply you can access them with the Enum value:
if OS.LINUX.value:
print("Cool. It is Linux")
PS: It is Python 3.
There are a lot of ways to find this. The easiest way is to use the os package:
import os
print(os.name)
-
This was already covered in the first answer 14 years ago. What is new? Commented Mar 25, 2023 at 18:50
This a function I use to make adjustments on my code so it runs on Windows, Linux and macOS:
import sys
def get_os(osoptions={'linux':'linux', 'Windows':'win', 'macos':'darwin'}):
'''
Get OS to allow code specifics
'''
opsys = [k for k in osoptions.keys() if sys.platform.lower().find(osoptions[k].lower()) != -1]
try:
return opsys[0]
except:
return 'unknown_OS'
You can look at the code in pyOSinfo
which is part of the pip-date package, to get the most relevant OS information, as seen from your Python distribution.
One of the most common reasons people want to check their OS is for terminal compatibility and if certain system commands are available. Unfortunately, the success of this checking is somewhat dependent on your Python installation and OS. For example, uname
is not available on most Windows Python packages. The above Python program will show you the output of the most commonly used built-in functions, already provided by os, sys, platform, site
.
So the best way to get only the essential code is looking at that as an example.
-
Please review Why not upload images of code/errors when asking a question? (e.g., "Images should only be used to illustrate problems that can't be made clear in any other way, such as to provide screenshots of a user interface.") and do the right thing (it covers answers as well). Thanks in advance. Commented Mar 25, 2023 at 19:27
If you want to use OS related operations. You can use this code:
import sys
def getOS() -> str:
os = sys.platform
if os == "linux":
return "linux"
elif os == "darwin":
return "mac"
elif os == "win32":
return "windows"
else:
raise Exception("OS not supported")
See this reference for more detail: https://docs.python.org/3/library/sys.html#sys.platform