According to the question " How to get Linux distribution name and version? ", to get the linux distro name and version, this works:
lsb_release -a
On my system, it shows the needed output:
No LSB modules are available.
Distributor ID: Ubuntu
Description: Ubuntu 9.10
Release: 9.10
Codename: karmic
Now, to get this info in C++, Qt4's QProcess would be a great option but since I am developing without Qt using std c++, I need to know how to get th开发者_运维技巧is info in standard C++, i.e. the stdout of the process, and also a way to parse the info.
Uptil now I am trying to use code from here but am stuck on function read().
You can simply use the function:
int uname(struct utsname *buf);
by including the header
#include <sys/utsname.h>
It already returns the name & version as a part of the structure:
struct utsname
{
char sysname[]; /* Operating system name (e.g., "Linux") */
char nodename[]; /* Name within "some implementation-defined network" */
char release[]; /* OS release (e.g., "2.6.28") */
char version[]; /* OS version */
char machine[]; /* Hardware identifier */
#ifdef _GNU_SOURCE
char domainname[]; /* NIS or YP domain name */
#endif
};
Am I missing something?
For recent linux distros you can use following to get the OS info. The output is pretty standard and can be parsed using following spec:
https://www.freedesktop.org/software/systemd/man/os-release.html
cat /etc/os-release
Sample outputs:
NAME=Fedora
VERSION="27 (Twenty Seven)"
ID=fedora
VERSION_ID=27
PRETTY_NAME="Fedora 27 (Twenty Seven)"
NAME="Ubuntu"
VERSION="16.04.4 LTS (Xenial Xerus)"
ID=ubuntu
ID_LIKE=debian
PRETTY_NAME="Ubuntu 16.04.4 LTS"
VERSION_ID="16.04"
NAME="Arch Linux"
PRETTY_NAME="Arch Linux"
ID=arch
ID_LIKE=archlinux
ANSI_COLOR="0;36"
Got it from cplusplus.com forums, a simple call GetSystemOutput("/usr/bin/lsb_release -a")
works.
char* GetSystemOutput(char* cmd){
int buff_size = 32;
char* buff = new char[buff_size];
char* ret = NULL;
string str = "";
int fd[2];
int old_fd[3];
pipe(fd);
old_fd[0] = dup(STDIN_FILENO);
old_fd[1] = dup(STDOUT_FILENO);
old_fd[2] = dup(STDERR_FILENO);
int pid = fork();
switch(pid){
case 0:
close(fd[0]);
close(STDOUT_FILENO);
close(STDERR_FILENO);
dup2(fd[1], STDOUT_FILENO);
dup2(fd[1], STDERR_FILENO);
system(cmd);
//execlp((const char*)cmd, cmd,0);
close (fd[1]);
exit(0);
break;
case -1:
cerr << "GetSystemOutput/fork() error\n" << endl;
exit(1);
default:
close(fd[1]);
dup2(fd[0], STDIN_FILENO);
int rc = 1;
while (rc > 0){
rc = read(fd[0], buff, buff_size);
str.append(buff, rc);
//memset(buff, 0, buff_size);
}
ret = new char [strlen((char*)str.c_str())];
strcpy(ret, (char*)str.c_str());
waitpid(pid, NULL, 0);
close(fd[0]);
}
dup2(STDIN_FILENO, old_fd[0]);
dup2(STDOUT_FILENO, old_fd[1]);
dup2(STDERR_FILENO, old_fd[2]);
return ret;
}
int writepipe[2];
if (pipe(writepipe) < 0) {
perror("pipe");
return 1;
}
int ret = fork();
if (ret < 0) {
perror("fork");
return 1;
}
else if (ret == 0) // child process
{
dup2(writepipe[1],1); // set writepipe[1] as stdout
// close fds
close(writepipe[0]);
close(writepipe[1]);
execlp("lsb_release","lsb_release","-a",NULL); //TODO: Error checking
}
else // parent process
{
int status;
waitpid(ret,&status,0); //TODO: Error checking
//do what you need
//read output of lsb_release from writepipe[0]
}
It works for me
There are files named /etc/version and /etc/release which have information like whether you're using Ubuntu or Fedora, etc. (which is what the OP clarified his question to be).
Personally I like the uname solution posted by @Alok Slav, but in case it helps someone who needs to use a command-line utility to get the info, consider using popen.
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