import os from 'node:os'; import execa from 'execa'; // Reference: https://www.gaijin.at/en/lstwinver.php // Windows 11 reference: https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/release-health/windows11-release-information const names = new Map([ ['10.0.22', '11'], // It's unclear whether future Windows 11 versions will use this version scheme: https://github.com/sindresorhus/windows-release/pull/26/files#r744945281 ['10.0', '10'], ['6.3', '8.1'], ['6.2', '8'], ['6.1', '7'], ['6.0', 'Vista'], ['5.2', 'Server 2003'], ['5.1', 'XP'], ['5.0', '2000'], ['4.90', 'ME'], ['4.10', '98'], ['4.03', '95'], ['4.00', '95'], ]); export default function windowsRelease(release) { const version = /(\d+\.\d+)(?:\.(\d+))?/.exec(release || os.release()); if (release && !version) { throw new Error('`release` argument doesn\'t match `n.n`'); } let ver = version[1] || ''; const build = version[2] || ''; // Server 2008, 2012, 2016, and 2019 versions are ambiguous with desktop versions and must be detected at runtime. // If `release` is omitted or we're on a Windows system, and the version number is an ambiguous version // then use `wmic` to get the OS caption: https://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/aa394531(v=vs.85).aspx // If `wmic` is obsolete (later versions of Windows 10), use PowerShell instead. // If the resulting caption contains the year 2008, 2012, 2016, 2019 or 2022, it is a server version, so return a server OS name. if ((!release || release === os.release()) && ['6.1', '6.2', '6.3', '10.0'].includes(ver)) { let stdout; try { stdout = execa.sync('wmic', ['os', 'get', 'Caption']).stdout || ''; } catch { stdout = execa.sync('powershell', ['(Get-CimInstance -ClassName Win32_OperatingSystem).caption']).stdout || ''; } const year = (stdout.match(/2008|2012|2016|2019|2022/) || [])[0]; if (year) { return `Server ${year}`; } } // Windows 11 if (ver === '10.0' && build.startsWith('22')) { ver = '10.0.22'; } return names.get(ver); }