Commit 795eaeb4 authored by Victor Stinner's avatar Victor Stinner

Issue #12326: update sys.platform doc for Linux

parent e6747472
......@@ -702,20 +702,21 @@ always available.
This string contains a platform identifier that can be used to append
platform-specific components to :data:`sys.path`, for instance.
For Unix systems, this is the lowercased OS name as returned by ``uname -s``
with the first part of the version as returned by ``uname -r`` appended,
e.g. ``'sunos5'`` or ``'linux2'``, *at the time when Python was built*.
Unless you want to test for a specific system version, it is therefore
recommended to use the following idiom::
For Unix systems, except on Linux, this is the lowercased OS name as
returned by ``uname -s`` with the first part of the version as returned by
``uname -r`` appended, e.g. ``'sunos5'`` or ``'freebsd8'``, *at the time
when Python was built*. Unless you want to test for a specific system
version, it is therefore recommended to use the following idiom::
if sys.platform.startswith('linux'):
# Linux-specific code here...
if sys.platform.startswith('freebsd'):
# FreeBSD-specific code here...
For other systems, the values are:
================ ===========================
System :data:`platform` value
================ ===========================
Linux ``'linux'``
Windows ``'win32'``
Windows/Cygwin ``'cygwin'``
Mac OS X ``'darwin'``
......@@ -723,6 +724,10 @@ always available.
OS/2 EMX ``'os2emx'``
================ ===========================
.. versionchanged:: 3.3
On Linux, :attr:`sys.platform` doesn't contain the major version anymore.
It is always ``'linux'``, instead of ``'linux2'`` or ``'linux3'``.
.. seealso::
:attr:`os.name` has a coarser granularity. :func:`os.uname` gives
system-dependent version information.
......
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