Added 'get_platform()' to construct a string that identifies the current

platform, using 'os.uname()' or 'sys.platform'.
This commit is contained in:
Greg Ward 2000-03-01 14:40:15 +00:00
parent e51d69efb0
commit 585df89f60
1 changed files with 19 additions and 1 deletions

View File

@ -11,7 +11,7 @@
__rcsid__ = "$Id$" __rcsid__ = "$Id$"
import os import os, string
from distutils.errors import * from distutils.errors import *
@ -437,3 +437,21 @@ def write_file (filename, contents):
for line in contents: for line in contents:
f.write (line + "\n") f.write (line + "\n")
f.close () f.close ()
def get_platform ():
"""Return a string (suitable for tacking onto directory names) that
identifies the current platform. Under Unix, identifies both the OS
and hardware architecture, e.g. "linux-i586", "solaris-sparc",
"irix-mips". For Windows and Mac OS, just returns 'sys.platform' --
i.e. "???" or "???"."""
if os.name == 'posix':
uname = os.uname()
OS = uname[0]
arch = uname[4]
return "%s-%s" % (string.lower (OS), string.lower (arch))
else:
return sys.platform
# get_platform()