php_unameReturns information about the operating system PHP is running on
&reftitle.description;
stringphp_unamestringmode"a"php_uname returns a description of the operating
system PHP is running on. This is the same string you see at the very
top of the phpinfo output. For the name of just
the operating system, consider using the PHP_OS
constant, but keep in mind this constant will contain the operating
system PHP was built on.
On some older UNIX platforms, it may not be able to determine the
current OS information in which case it will revert to displaying
the OS PHP was built on. This will only happen if your uname()
library call either doesn't exist or doesn't work.
&reftitle.parameters;
modemode is a single character that defines what
information is returned:
'a': This is the default. Contains all modes in
the sequence "s n r v m".
's': Operating system name. eg.
FreeBSD.
'n': Host name. eg.
localhost.example.com.
'r': Release name. eg.
5.1.2-RELEASE.
'v': Version information. Varies a lot between
operating systems.
'm': Machine type. eg. i386.
&reftitle.returnvalues;
Returns the description, as a string.
&reftitle.examples;
Some php_uname examples
]]>
There are also some related
Predefined PHP constants that may come in handy, for example:
A few OS related constant examples
]]>
&reftitle.seealso;
phpversionphp_sapi_namephpinfo