Gnu/coreutils/uname-invocation

From Get docs

21.4 uname: Print system information

uname prints information about the machine and operating system it is run on. If no options are given, uname acts as if the -s option were given. Synopsis:

uname [option]…

If multiple options or -a are given, the selected information is printed in this order:

kernel-name nodename kernel-release kernel-version
machine processor hardware-platform operating-system

The information may contain internal spaces, so such output cannot be parsed reliably. In the following example, release is ‘2.2.18ss.e820-bda652a #4 SMP Tue Jun 5 11:24:08 PDT 2001’:

uname -a
⇒ Linux dumdum 2.2.18 #4 SMP Tue Jun 5 11:24:08 PDT 2001 i686 unknown unknown GNU/Linux

The program accepts the following options. Also see Common options.

-a
--all

Print all of the below information, except omit the processor type and the hardware platform name if they are unknown.

-i
--hardware-platform

Print the hardware platform name (sometimes called the hardware implementation). Print ‘unknown’ if this information is not available. Note this is non-portable (even across GNU/Linux distributions).

-m
--machine

Print the machine hardware name (sometimes called the hardware class or hardware type).

-n
--nodename

Print the network node hostname.

-p
--processor

Print the processor type (sometimes called the instruction set architecture or ISA). Print ‘unknown’ if this information is not available. Note this is non-portable (even across GNU/Linux distributions).

-o
--operating-system

Print the name of the operating system.

-r
--kernel-release

Print the kernel release.

-s
--kernel-name

Print the kernel name. POSIX 1003.1-2001 (see Standards conformance) calls this “the implementation of the operating system”, because the POSIX specification itself has no notion of “kernel”. The kernel name might be the same as the operating system name printed by the -o or --operating-system option, but it might differ. Some operating systems (e.g., FreeBSD, HP-UX) have the same name as their underlying kernels; others (e.g., GNU/Linux, Solaris) do not.

-v
--kernel-version

Print the kernel version.

An exit status of zero indicates success, and a nonzero value indicates failure.