Reputation: 6110
I'm making a OS X app where I need to get the Mac model, for example:
iMac11,3
MacBook3,1
And so on. Is there any class, or function to get it?
Upvotes: 11
Views: 7943
Reputation: 1472
While not using a direct Cocoa API, you could use NSTask to execute the "system_profiler" command line tool. If you execute the tool as: "system_profiler SPHardwareDataType" it will give you a smaller output which could be filtered to extract the model identifier.
Update
I found an example using sysctl programmatically:
int mib[2];
size_t len = 0;
char *rstring = NULL;
mib[0] = CTL_HW;
mib[1] = HW_MODEL;
sysctl( mib, 2, NULL, &len, NULL, 0 );
rstring = malloc( len );
sysctl( mib, 2, rstring, &len, NULL, 0 );
NSLog(@"%s", rstring );
free( rstring );
rstring = NULL;
Sourced from here.
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 16857
The API for that would be in the IOKit. Looking in the IORegistryExplorer app on my laptop, I see that the first node from the root of the IOService tree is an IOPlatformExpertDevice, with a entry under the key "model" equal to "MacBookPro6,1"
Upvotes: 2
Reputation: 9392
I'm not sure if there is an exact way of getting it through Cocoa, but you can use NSTask and get this through shell.
sysctl hw.model
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 21239
This information is available via. sysctl
:
#include <stdlib.h>
#include <stdio.h>
#include <sys/types.h>
#include <sys/sysctl.h>
size_t len = 0;
sysctlbyname("hw.model", NULL, &len, NULL, 0);
if (len) {
char *model = malloc(len*sizeof(char));
sysctlbyname("hw.model", model, &len, NULL, 0);
printf("%s\n", model);
free(model);
}
Upvotes: 27