1OS-RELEASE(5) os-release OS-RELEASE(5)
2
3
4
6 os-release, initrd-release, extension-release - Operating system
7 identification
8
10 /etc/os-release
11
12 /usr/lib/os-release
13
14 /etc/initrd-release
15
16 /usr/lib/extension-release.d/extension-release.IMAGE
17
19 The /etc/os-release and /usr/lib/os-release files contain operating
20 system identification data.
21
22 The format of os-release is a newline-separated list of
23 environment-like shell-compatible variable assignments. It is possible
24 to source the configuration from Bourne shell scripts, however, beyond
25 mere variable assignments, no shell features are supported (this means
26 variable expansion is explicitly not supported), allowing applications
27 to read the file without implementing a shell compatible execution
28 engine. Variable assignment values must be enclosed in double or single
29 quotes if they include spaces, semicolons or other special characters
30 outside of A–Z, a–z, 0–9. (Assignments that do not include these
31 special characters may be enclosed in quotes too, but this is
32 optional.) Shell special characters ("$", quotes, backslash, backtick)
33 must be escaped with backslashes, following shell style. All strings
34 should be in UTF-8 encoding, and non-printable characters should not be
35 used. Concatenation of multiple individually quoted strings is not
36 supported. Lines beginning with "#" are treated as comments. Blank
37 lines are permitted and ignored.
38
39 The file /etc/os-release takes precedence over /usr/lib/os-release.
40 Applications should check for the former, and exclusively use its data
41 if it exists, and only fall back to /usr/lib/os-release if it is
42 missing. Applications should not read data from both files at the same
43 time. /usr/lib/os-release is the recommended place to store OS release
44 information as part of vendor trees. /etc/os-release should be a
45 relative symlink to /usr/lib/os-release, to provide compatibility with
46 applications only looking at /etc/. A relative symlink instead of an
47 absolute symlink is necessary to avoid breaking the link in a chroot or
48 initrd environment such as dracut.
49
50 os-release contains data that is defined by the operating system vendor
51 and should generally not be changed by the administrator.
52
53 As this file only encodes names and identifiers it should not be
54 localized.
55
56 The /etc/os-release and /usr/lib/os-release files might be symlinks to
57 other files, but it is important that the file is available from
58 earliest boot on, and hence must be located on the root file system.
59
60 os-release must not contain repeating keys. Nevertheless, readers
61 should pick the entries later in the file in case of repeats, similarly
62 to how a shell sourcing the file would. A reader may warn about
63 repeating entries.
64
65 For a longer rationale for os-release please refer to the Announcement
66 of /etc/os-release[1].
67
68 /etc/initrd-release
69 In the initrd[2], /etc/initrd-release plays the same role as os-release
70 in the main system. Additionally, the presence of that file means that
71 the system is in the initrd phase. /etc/os-release should be symlinked
72 to /etc/initrd-release (or vice versa), so programs that only look for
73 /etc/os-release (as described above) work correctly.
74
75 The rest of this document that talks about os-release should be
76 understood to apply to initrd-release too.
77
78 /usr/lib/extension-release.d/extension-release.IMAGE
79 /usr/lib/extension-release.d/extension-release.IMAGE plays the same
80 role for extension images as os-release for the main system, and
81 follows the syntax and rules as described in the Portable Services
82 Documentation[3]. The purpose of this file is to identify the extension
83 and to allow the operating system to verify that the extension image
84 matches the base OS. This is typically implemented by checking that the
85 ID= options match, and either SYSEXT_LEVEL= exists and matches too, or
86 if it is not present, VERSION_ID= exists and matches. This ensures
87 ABI/API compatibility between the layers and prevents merging of an
88 incompatible image in an overlay.
89
90 In the extension-release.IMAGE filename, the IMAGE part must exactly
91 match the file name of the containing image with the suffix removed. In
92 case it is not possible to guarantee that an image file name is stable
93 and doesn't change between the build and the deployment phases, it is
94 possible to relax this check: if exactly one file whose name matches
95 "extension-release.*" is present in this directory, and the file is
96 tagged with a user.extension-release.strict xattr(7) set to the string
97 "0", it will be used instead.
98
99 The rest of this document that talks about os-release should be
100 understood to apply to extension-release too.
101
103 The following OS identifications parameters may be set using
104 os-release:
105
106 General information identifying the operating system
107 NAME=
108 A string identifying the operating system, without a version
109 component, and suitable for presentation to the user. If not set, a
110 default of "NAME=Linux" may be used.
111
112 Examples: "NAME=Fedora", "NAME="Debian GNU/Linux"".
113
114 ID=
115 A lower-case string (no spaces or other characters outside of 0–9,
116 a–z, ".", "_" and "-") identifying the operating system, excluding
117 any version information and suitable for processing by scripts or
118 usage in generated filenames. If not set, a default of "ID=linux"
119 may be used. Note that even though this string may not include
120 characters that require shell quoting, quoting may nevertheless be
121 used.
122
123 Examples: "ID=fedora", "ID=debian".
124
125 ID_LIKE=
126 A space-separated list of operating system identifiers in the same
127 syntax as the ID= setting. It should list identifiers of operating
128 systems that are closely related to the local operating system in
129 regards to packaging and programming interfaces, for example
130 listing one or more OS identifiers the local OS is a derivative
131 from. An OS should generally only list other OS identifiers it
132 itself is a derivative of, and not any OSes that are derived from
133 it, though symmetric relationships are possible. Build scripts and
134 similar should check this variable if they need to identify the
135 local operating system and the value of ID= is not recognized.
136 Operating systems should be listed in order of how closely the
137 local operating system relates to the listed ones, starting with
138 the closest. This field is optional.
139
140 Examples: for an operating system with "ID=centos", an assignment
141 of "ID_LIKE="rhel fedora"" would be appropriate. For an operating
142 system with "ID=ubuntu", an assignment of "ID_LIKE=debian" is
143 appropriate.
144
145 PRETTY_NAME=
146 A pretty operating system name in a format suitable for
147 presentation to the user. May or may not contain a release code
148 name or OS version of some kind, as suitable. If not set, a default
149 of "PRETTY_NAME="Linux"" may be used
150
151 Example: "PRETTY_NAME="Fedora 17 (Beefy Miracle)"".
152
153 CPE_NAME=
154 A CPE name for the operating system, in URI binding syntax,
155 following the Common Platform Enumeration Specification[4] as
156 proposed by the NIST. This field is optional.
157
158 Example: "CPE_NAME="cpe:/o:fedoraproject:fedora:17""
159
160 VARIANT=
161 A string identifying a specific variant or edition of the operating
162 system suitable for presentation to the user. This field may be
163 used to inform the user that the configuration of this system is
164 subject to a specific divergent set of rules or default
165 configuration settings. This field is optional and may not be
166 implemented on all systems.
167
168 Examples: "VARIANT="Server Edition"", "VARIANT="Smart Refrigerator
169 Edition"".
170
171 Note: this field is for display purposes only. The VARIANT_ID field
172 should be used for making programmatic decisions.
173
174 VARIANT_ID=
175 A lower-case string (no spaces or other characters outside of 0–9,
176 a–z, ".", "_" and "-"), identifying a specific variant or edition
177 of the operating system. This may be interpreted by other packages
178 in order to determine a divergent default configuration. This field
179 is optional and may not be implemented on all systems.
180
181 Examples: "VARIANT_ID=server", "VARIANT_ID=embedded".
182
183 Information about the version of the operating system
184 VERSION=
185 A string identifying the operating system version, excluding any OS
186 name information, possibly including a release code name, and
187 suitable for presentation to the user. This field is optional.
188
189 Examples: "VERSION=17", "VERSION="17 (Beefy Miracle)"".
190
191 VERSION_ID=
192 A lower-case string (mostly numeric, no spaces or other characters
193 outside of 0–9, a–z, ".", "_" and "-") identifying the operating
194 system version, excluding any OS name information or release code
195 name, and suitable for processing by scripts or usage in generated
196 filenames. This field is optional.
197
198 Examples: "VERSION_ID=17", "VERSION_ID=11.04".
199
200 VERSION_CODENAME=
201 A lower-case string (no spaces or other characters outside of 0–9,
202 a–z, ".", "_" and "-") identifying the operating system release
203 code name, excluding any OS name information or release version,
204 and suitable for processing by scripts or usage in generated
205 filenames. This field is optional and may not be implemented on all
206 systems.
207
208 Examples: "VERSION_CODENAME=buster", "VERSION_CODENAME=xenial".
209
210 BUILD_ID=
211 A string uniquely identifying the system image originally used as
212 the installation base. In most cases, VERSION_ID or
213 IMAGE_ID+IMAGE_VERSION are updated when the entire system image is
214 replaced during an update. BUILD_ID may be used in distributions
215 where the original installation image version is important:
216 VERSION_ID would change during incremental system updates, but
217 BUILD_ID would not. This field is optional.
218
219 Examples: "BUILD_ID="2013-03-20.3"", "BUILD_ID=201303203".
220
221 IMAGE_ID=
222 A lower-case string (no spaces or other characters outside of 0–9,
223 a–z, ".", "_" and "-"), identifying a specific image of the
224 operating system. This is supposed to be used for environments
225 where OS images are prepared, built, shipped and updated as
226 comprehensive, consistent OS images. This field is optional and may
227 not be implemented on all systems, in particularly not on those
228 that are not managed via images but put together and updated from
229 individual packages and on the local system.
230
231 Examples: "IMAGE_ID=vendorx-cashier-system",
232 "IMAGE_ID=netbook-image".
233
234 IMAGE_VERSION=
235 A lower-case string (mostly numeric, no spaces or other characters
236 outside of 0–9, a–z, ".", "_" and "-") identifying the OS image
237 version. This is supposed to be used together with IMAGE_ID
238 described above, to discern different versions of the same image.
239
240 Examples: "IMAGE_VERSION=33", "IMAGE_VERSION=47.1rc1".
241
242 To summarize: if the image updates are built and shipped as
243 comprehensive units, IMAGE_ID+IMAGE_VERSION is the best fit. Otherwise,
244 if updates eventually completely replace previously installed contents,
245 as in a typical binary distribution, VERSION_ID should be used to
246 identify major releases of the operating system. BUILD_ID may be used
247 instead or in addition to VERSION_ID when the original system image
248 version is important.
249
250 Presentation information and links
251 HOME_URL=, DOCUMENTATION_URL=, SUPPORT_URL=, BUG_REPORT_URL=,
252 PRIVACY_POLICY_URL=
253 Links to resources on the Internet related to the operating system.
254 HOME_URL= should refer to the homepage of the operating system, or
255 alternatively some homepage of the specific version of the
256 operating system. DOCUMENTATION_URL= should refer to the main
257 documentation page for this operating system. SUPPORT_URL= should
258 refer to the main support page for the operating system, if there
259 is any. This is primarily intended for operating systems which
260 vendors provide support for. BUG_REPORT_URL= should refer to the
261 main bug reporting page for the operating system, if there is any.
262 This is primarily intended for operating systems that rely on
263 community QA. PRIVACY_POLICY_URL= should refer to the main privacy
264 policy page for the operating system, if there is any. These
265 settings are optional, and providing only some of these settings is
266 common. These URLs are intended to be exposed in "About this
267 system" UIs behind links with captions such as "About this
268 Operating System", "Obtain Support", "Report a Bug", or "Privacy
269 Policy". The values should be in RFC3986 format[5], and should be
270 "http:" or "https:" URLs, and possibly "mailto:" or "tel:". Only
271 one URL shall be listed in each setting. If multiple resources need
272 to be referenced, it is recommended to provide an online landing
273 page linking all available resources.
274
275 Examples: "HOME_URL="https://fedoraproject.org/"",
276 "BUG_REPORT_URL="https://bugzilla.redhat.com/"".
277
278 SUPPORT_END=
279 The date at which support for this version of the OS ends. (What
280 exactly "lack of support" means varies between vendors, but
281 generally users should assume that updates, including security
282 fixes, will not be provided.) The value is a date in the ISO 8601
283 format "YYYY-MM-DD", and specifies the first day on which support
284 is not provided.
285
286 For example, "SUPPORT_END=2001-01-01" means that the system was
287 supported until the end of the last day of the previous millennium.
288
289 LOGO=
290 A string, specifying the name of an icon as defined by
291 freedesktop.org Icon Theme Specification[6]. This can be used by
292 graphical applications to display an operating system's or
293 distributor's logo. This field is optional and may not necessarily
294 be implemented on all systems.
295
296 Examples: "LOGO=fedora-logo", "LOGO=distributor-logo-opensuse"
297
298 ANSI_COLOR=
299 A suggested presentation color when showing the OS name on the
300 console. This should be specified as string suitable for inclusion
301 in the ESC [ m ANSI/ECMA-48 escape code for setting graphical
302 rendition. This field is optional.
303
304 Examples: "ANSI_COLOR="0;31"" for red, "ANSI_COLOR="1;34"" for
305 light blue, or "ANSI_COLOR="0;38;2;60;110;180"" for Fedora blue.
306
307 Distribution-level defaults and metadata
308 DEFAULT_HOSTNAME=
309 A string specifying the hostname if hostname(5) is not present and
310 no other configuration source specifies the hostname. Must be
311 either a single DNS label (a string composed of 7-bit ASCII
312 lower-case characters and no spaces or dots, limited to the format
313 allowed for DNS domain name labels), or a sequence of such labels
314 separated by single dots that forms a valid DNS FQDN. The hostname
315 must be at most 64 characters, which is a Linux limitation (DNS
316 allows longer names).
317
318 See org.freedesktop.hostname1(5) for a description of how systemd-
319 hostnamed.service(8) determines the fallback hostname.
320
321 ARCHITECTURE=
322 A string that specifies which CPU architecture the userspace
323 binaries require. The architecture identifiers are the same as for
324 ConditionArchitecture= described in systemd.unit(5). The field is
325 optional and should only be used when just single architecture is
326 supported. It may provide redundant information when used in a GPT
327 partition with a GUID type that already encodes the architecture.
328 If this is not the case, the architecture should be specified in
329 e.g., an extension image, to prevent an incompatible host from
330 loading it.
331
332 SYSEXT_LEVEL=
333 A lower-case string (mostly numeric, no spaces or other characters
334 outside of 0–9, a–z, ".", "_" and "-") identifying the operating
335 system extensions support level, to indicate which extension images
336 are supported. See
337 /usr/lib/extension-release.d/extension-release.IMAGE, initrd[2] and
338 systemd-sysext(8)) for more information.
339
340 Examples: "SYSEXT_LEVEL=2", "SYSEXT_LEVEL=15.14".
341
342 SYSEXT_SCOPE=
343 Takes a space-separated list of one or more of the strings
344 "system", "initrd" and "portable". This field is only supported in
345 extension-release.d/ files and indicates what environments the
346 system extension is applicable to: i.e. to regular systems, to
347 initrds, or to portable service images. If unspecified,
348 "SYSEXT_SCOPE=system portable" is implied, i.e. any system
349 extension without this field is applicable to regular systems and
350 to portable service environments, but not to initrd environments.
351
352 PORTABLE_PREFIXES=
353 Takes a space-separated list of one or more valid prefix match
354 strings for the Portable Services Documentation[3] logic. This
355 field serves two purposes: it is informational, identifying
356 portable service images as such (and thus allowing them to be
357 distinguished from other OS images, such as bootable system
358 images). It is also used when a portable service image is attached:
359 the specified or implied portable service prefix is checked against
360 the list specified here, to enforce restrictions how images may be
361 attached to a system.
362
363 Notes
364 If you are using this file to determine the OS or a specific version of
365 it, use the ID and VERSION_ID fields, possibly with ID_LIKE as fallback
366 for ID. When looking for an OS identification string for presentation
367 to the user use the PRETTY_NAME field.
368
369 Note that operating system vendors may choose not to provide version
370 information, for example to accommodate for rolling releases. In this
371 case, VERSION and VERSION_ID may be unset. Applications should not rely
372 on these fields to be set.
373
374 Operating system vendors may extend the file format and introduce new
375 fields. It is highly recommended to prefix new fields with an OS
376 specific name in order to avoid name clashes. Applications reading this
377 file must ignore unknown fields.
378
379 Example: "DEBIAN_BTS="debbugs://bugs.debian.org/"".
380
381 Container and sandbox runtime managers may make the host's
382 identification data available to applications by providing the host's
383 /etc/os-release (if available, otherwise /usr/lib/os-release as a
384 fallback) as /run/host/os-release.
385
387 Example 1. os-release file for Fedora Workstation
388
389 NAME=Fedora
390 VERSION="32 (Workstation Edition)"
391 ID=fedora
392 VERSION_ID=32
393 PRETTY_NAME="Fedora 32 (Workstation Edition)"
394 ANSI_COLOR="0;38;2;60;110;180"
395 LOGO=fedora-logo-icon
396 CPE_NAME="cpe:/o:fedoraproject:fedora:32"
397 HOME_URL="https://fedoraproject.org/"
398 DOCUMENTATION_URL="https://docs.fedoraproject.org/en-US/fedora/f32/system-administrators-guide/"
399 SUPPORT_URL="https://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Communicating_and_getting_help"
400 BUG_REPORT_URL="https://bugzilla.redhat.com/"
401 REDHAT_BUGZILLA_PRODUCT="Fedora"
402 REDHAT_BUGZILLA_PRODUCT_VERSION=32
403 REDHAT_SUPPORT_PRODUCT="Fedora"
404 REDHAT_SUPPORT_PRODUCT_VERSION=32
405 PRIVACY_POLICY_URL="https://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Legal:PrivacyPolicy"
406 VARIANT="Workstation Edition"
407 VARIANT_ID=workstation
408
409 Example 2. extension-release file for an extension for Fedora
410 Workstation 32
411
412 ID=fedora
413 VERSION_ID=32
414
415 Example 3. Reading os-release in sh(1)
416
417 #!/bin/sh -eu
418 # SPDX-License-Identifier: MIT-0
419
420 test -e /etc/os-release && os_release='/etc/os-release' || os_release='/usr/lib/os-release'
421 . "${os_release}"
422
423 echo "Running on ${PRETTY_NAME:-Linux}"
424
425 if [ "${ID:-linux}" = "debian" ] || [ "${ID_LIKE#*debian*}" != "${ID_LIKE}" ]; then
426 echo "Looks like Debian!"
427 fi
428
429 Example 4. Reading os-release in python(1) (versions >= 3.10)
430
431 #!/usr/bin/python
432 # SPDX-License-Identifier: MIT-0
433
434 import platform
435 os_release = platform.freedesktop_os_release()
436
437 pretty_name = os_release.get('PRETTY_NAME', 'Linux')
438 print(f'Running on {pretty_name!r}')
439
440 if 'fedora' in [os_release.get('ID', 'linux'),
441 *os_release.get('ID_LIKE', '').split()]:
442 print('Looks like Fedora!')
443
444 See docs for platform.freedesktop_os_release[7] for more details.
445
446 Example 5. Reading os-release in python(1) (any version)
447
448 #!/usr/bin/python
449 # SPDX-License-Identifier: MIT-0
450
451 import ast
452 import re
453 import sys
454
455 def read_os_release():
456 try:
457 filename = '/etc/os-release'
458 f = open(filename)
459 except FileNotFoundError:
460 filename = '/usr/lib/os-release'
461 f = open(filename)
462
463 for line_number, line in enumerate(f, start=1):
464 line = line.rstrip()
465 if not line or line.startswith('#'):
466 continue
467 m = re.match(r'([A-Z][A-Z_0-9]+)=(.*)', line)
468 if m:
469 name, val = m.groups()
470 if val and val[0] in '"\'':
471 val = ast.literal_eval(val)
472 yield name, val
473 else:
474 print(f'{filename}:{line_number}: bad line {line!r}',
475 file=sys.stderr)
476
477 os_release = dict(read_os_release())
478
479 pretty_name = os_release.get('PRETTY_NAME', 'Linux')
480 print(f'Running on {pretty_name!r}')
481
482 if 'debian' in [os_release.get('ID', 'linux'),
483 *os_release.get('ID_LIKE', '').split()]:
484 print('Looks like Debian!')
485
486 Note that the above version that uses the built-in implementation is
487 preferred in most cases, and the open-coded version here is provided
488 for reference.
489
491 systemd(1), lsb_release(1), hostname(5), machine-id(5), machine-info(5)
492
494 1. Announcement of /etc/os-release
495 https://0pointer.de/blog/projects/os-release
496
497 2. initrd
498 https://docs.kernel.org/admin-guide/initrd.html
499
500 3. Portable Services Documentation
501 https://systemd.io/PORTABLE_SERVICES
502
503 4. Common Platform Enumeration Specification
504 http://scap.nist.gov/specifications/cpe/
505
506 5. RFC3986 format
507 https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc3986
508
509 6. freedesktop.org Icon Theme Specification
510 https://standards.freedesktop.org/icon-theme-spec/latest
511
512 7.
513
514 platform.freedesktop_os_release
515 https://docs.python.org/3/library/platform.html#platform.freedesktop_os_release
516
517
518
519systemd 253 OS-RELEASE(5)