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lsb_release Command on Linux

In your lifetime on Linux systems, you obviously had to run a number of commands for lots of purposes, right? A core command that’s available on all the Linux systems is the “lsb_release”. This is a tool that prints a certain LSB (Linux Standard Base) and a short information about the current system (Linux distro). This is a very handy tool to find out a summary of your system info if you need it right away.

Note that there are other advanced tools like Superfetch and Neofetch that will provide you more in-depth information about your system.

lsb_release command

Here are all the available command line options for the tool –

  • -s or –short: Tells the tool to print out a short version of the info.
  • -i or –id: Prints out the string ID of the distributor.

  • -v or –version: Displays all the available lsb modules that the current system support.
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  • -c or –codename: Prints out the codename of the distro.

  • -d or –description: Shows a single line text description of the distributor.

  • -r or –release: Prints out the release number of the distro.

  • -h or –help: Prints out a help file.

The most basic usage of the tool is –

lsb_release -a

This prints out all the information. Note that you can mix a number of arguments together.

lsb_release -sa

For advanced information on your system, you should rely on Superfetch or Neofetch.

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