hbutils.system.os
Operating System Utilities Module.
This module provides utilities for operating system operations, including executable detection and OS type identification.
The module exports functionality from two submodules:
executable: Functions for detecting and working with executable files in the system PATH
type: Functions for identifying operating system types (Linux, Windows, macOS)
This serves as a convenience module that aggregates OS-related utilities into a single namespace, allowing users to import all OS-related functionality from a single location.
- Example::
>>> from hbutils.system.os import is_windows, where >>> is_windows() False >>> where('python') ['/usr/bin/python', '/usr/local/bin/python']
is_linux
- hbutils.system.os.is_linux() bool[source]
Check if the current operating system is Linux.
Return
Trueif current operating system is linux, otherwise returnFalse.- Returns:
This OS is linux or not.
- Return type:
bool
- Example::
>>> is_linux() # On a Linux system True >>> is_linux() # On a Windows system False
is_windows
- hbutils.system.os.is_windows() bool[source]
Check if the current operating system is Windows.
Return
Trueif current operating system is windows, otherwise returnFalse.- Returns:
This OS is windows or not.
- Return type:
bool
- Example::
>>> is_windows() # On a Windows system True >>> is_windows() # On a Linux system False
is_darwin
- hbutils.system.os.is_darwin() bool[source]
Check if the current operating system is Darwin (macOS).
Return
Trueif current operating system is darwin, otherwise returnFalse.- Returns:
This OS is darwin or not.
- Return type:
bool
Note
Darwin is macOS.
- Example::
>>> is_darwin() # On a macOS system True >>> is_darwin() # On a Linux system False
is_macos
- hbutils.system.os.is_macos = <function is_darwin>
Check if the current operating system is Darwin (macOS).
Return
Trueif current operating system is darwin, otherwise returnFalse.- Returns:
This OS is darwin or not.
- Return type:
bool
Note
Darwin is macOS.
- Example::
>>> is_darwin() # On a macOS system True >>> is_darwin() # On a Linux system False
which
- hbutils.system.os.which(execfile: str) str | None[source]
Returns first matching file path, which is the one when we operate in terminal.
This function returns the first executable file found in the system PATH, which is typically the one that would be executed when running the command in a terminal. Returns None if no matching executable is found.
Deprecated since version 0.9: Use the native
shutil.which()instead. This function will be removed in version 1.0.- Parameters:
execfile (str) – Executable file to locate (such as
python).- Returns:
Absolute path of the executable file, or None if not found.
- Return type:
Optional[str]
- Examples::
>>> from hbutils.system import which >>> >>> which('apt-get') '/usr/bin/apt-get' >>> which('bash') '/usr/bin/bash' >>> which('not_installed') None
Deprecated since version 0.9: This will be removed in 1.0. Use the native
shutil.which()instead
where
- hbutils.system.os.where(execfile: str) List[str][source]
Returns all matching file paths for the given executable file.
This function searches through all directories in the system PATH environment variable and returns a list of all absolute paths where the executable file can be found. On Windows, it also checks for common executable extensions (.bat, .cmd, .com, .exe).
- Parameters:
execfile (str) – Executable file to locate (such as
python).- Returns:
The list of absolute paths of the executable files.
- Return type:
List[str]
- Examples::
>>> from hbutils.system import where >>> >>> where('apt-get') ['/usr/bin/apt-get', '/bin/apt-get'] >>> where('bash') ['/usr/bin/bash', '/bin/bash'] >>> where('not_installed') []