From e31c6804ca177ab911f6212b34930969b83f2d30 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001
From: Stephen Gallagher <sgallagh@redhat.com>
Date: Wed, 29 Apr 2015 08:19:05 -0400
Subject: [PATCH] Add VARIANT as a standard value for /etc/os-release
Some distributions (such as Fedora) are using the VARIANT field to
indicate to select packages which of several default configurations
they should be using. For example, VARIANT=Server provides a
different default firewall configuration (blocking basically
everything but SSH and the management console) whereas
VARIANT=Workstation opens many other ports for application
compatibility.
By adding this patch to the manual pages, we can standardize on a
cross-distribution mechanism for accomplishing this.
Fedora implementation details are available at
https://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Packaging:Per-Product_Configuration
(David: drop double paranthesis)
(cherry picked from commit be7d0048ddda1e994f651e2825f96266d537d10d)
Cherry-picked from: be7d004
Resolves: #1222517
---
man/os-release.xml | 35 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
1 file changed, 35 insertions(+)
diff --git a/man/os-release.xml b/man/os-release.xml
index 4f57323..4ca2e59 100644
--- a/man/os-release.xml
+++ b/man/os-release.xml
@@ -273,6 +273,41 @@
</para></listitem>
</varlistentry>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><varname>VARIANT=</varname></term>
+
+ <listitem><para>
+ A string identifying a specific variant or edition of the
+ operating system suitable for presentation to the user. This
+ field may be used to inform the user that the configuration of
+ this system is subject to a specific divergent set of rules or
+ default configuration settings. This field is optional and may
+ not be implemented on all systems.
+ Examples:
+ <literal>VARIANT="Server Edition"</literal>,
+ <literal>VARIANT="Smart Refrigerator Edition"</literal>
+ Note: this field is for display purposes only. The
+ <varname>VARIANT_ID</varname> field should be used for making
+ programmatic decisions.
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><varname>VARIANT_ID=</varname></term>
+
+ <listitem><para>
+ A lower-case string (no spaces or other characters outside of
+ 0-9, a-z, ".", "_" and "-"), identifying a specific variant or
+ edition of the operating system. This may be interpreted by
+ other packages in order to determine a divergent default
+ configuration. This field is optional and may not be
+ implemented on all systems.
+ Examples:
+ <literal>VARIANT_ID=server</literal>,
+ <literal>VARIANT_ID=embedded</literal>
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
</variablelist>
<para>If you are reading this file from C code or a shell script