diff --git a/docs/core/rid-catalog.md b/docs/core/rid-catalog.md index c407c0e259977..bc181f0a5837f 100644 --- a/docs/core/rid-catalog.md +++ b/docs/core/rid-catalog.md @@ -4,7 +4,7 @@ description: .NET Core Runtime IDentifier (RID) catalog keywords: .NET, .NET Core author: blackdwarf manager: wpickett -ms.date: 06/20/2016 +ms.date: 08/22/2016 ms.topic: article ms.prod: .net-core ms.technology: .net-core-technologies @@ -22,26 +22,26 @@ For the packages with native dependencies, it will designate on which platforms It is important to note that RIDs are really opaque strings. This means that they have to match exactly for operations using them to work. As an example, let us consider the case of [Elementary OS](https://elementary.io/), which is a straightforward clone of Ubuntu 14.04. Although .NET Core and CLI work on top of that version of Ubuntu, if you try to use them on Elementary OS -without any modifications, the restore operation for any package will fail. This is because we currently (May 3rd, 2016) don't +without any modifications, the restore operation for any package will fail. This is because we currently don't have a RID that designates Elementary OS as a platform. -RIDs that represent concrete operating systems should be of the form: `[os].[version]-[arch]` where: -- `[os]` is the operating system moniker, for example, `win` -- `[version]` is the operating system version in the form of a dot (`.`) separated version number, for example, `10.1511`, +RIDs that represent concrete operating systems usually follow this pattern: `[os].[version]-[arch]` where: +- `[os]` is the operating system moniker, for example, `ubuntu`. +- `[version]` is the operating system version in the form of a dot (`.`) separated version number, for example, `15.10`, accurate enough to reasonably enable assets to target operating system platform APIs represented by that version. - This **shouldn't** be marketing versions, as they often represent multiple discrete versions of the operating -system with varying platform API surface area, for example, `win.10-x64` +system with varying platform API surface area. - `[arch]` is the processor architecture, for example, `x86`, `x64`, `arm`, `arm64`, etc. -The RID graph is defined in a package called `Microsoft.NETCore.Platforms` in a file called `runtime.json` which you can +The RID graph is defined in a package called `Microsoft.NETCore.Platforms` in a file called `runtime.json`, which you can see on the [CoreFX repo](https://github.com/dotnet/corefx/blob/master/pkg/Microsoft.NETCore.Platforms/runtime.json). If you use this file, you will notice that some of the RIDs have an `"#import"` statement in them. These statements are -compatibility statements. That means that a RID that has an imported RID in it, can be a target for restoring packages +compatibility statements. That means that a RID that has an imported RID in it can be a target for restoring packages for that RID. Slightly confusing, but let's look at an example. Let's take a look at macOS: ```json "osx.10.11-x64": { - "#import": [ "osx.10.11", "osx.10.10-x64" ] + "#import": [ "osx.10.11", "osx.10.10-x64" ] } ``` The above RID specifies that `osx.10.11-x64` imports `osx.10.10-x64`. This means that when restoring packages, NuGet will @@ -49,22 +49,15 @@ be able to restore packages that specify that they need `osx.10.10-x64` on `osx. A slightly bigger example RID graph: -- `win.10.1511-x64` - - `win.10.1511` - - `win.10-x64` - - `win.10` - - `win.6.3.9200-x64` - - `win.6.3-x64` - - `win.6.3` - - `win.6.3.9200` - - `win.6.2.9200-x64` - - `win.6.2.9200` - - `win.6.1.7600-x64` - - `win.6.1.7600` - - `win.6.1-x64` - - `win.6.1` - - `win` - - `any` +- `win10-arm` + - `win10` + - `win81-arm` + - `win81` + - `win8-arm` + - `win8` + - `win7` + - `win` + - `any` All RIDs eventually map back to the root `any` RID. @@ -78,24 +71,31 @@ working with them: to determine which RID(s) you need for a given platform ## Using RIDs -In order to use RIDs, you have to know which RIDs there are. This document lists out the currently supported RIDs in -.NET Core. Please be aware that this document is getting updated regularly as new RIDs are added to the platform. If you -wish to check if new ones are added, please check back here. +In order to use RIDs, you have to know which RIDs there are. New RIDs are added regularly to the platform. +For the latest version, please check the [runtime.json](https://github.com/dotnet/corefx/blob/master/pkg/Microsoft.NETCore.Platforms/runtime.json) file on CoreFX repo. -> We are working towards getting this information into a more interactive form. When that happens, this page will be -> updated to point to that tool and/or its usage documentation. +> [!NOTE] +> We are working towards getting this information into a more interactive form. +> When that happens, this page will be updated to point to that tool and/or its usage documentation. ## Windows RIDs -* Windows 7 +* Windows 7 / Windows Server 2008 R2 * `win7-x64` * `win7-x86` -* Windows 8 +* Windows 8 / Windows Server 2012 * `win8-x64` * `win8-x86` -* Windows 10 + * `win8-arm` +* Windows 8.1 / Windows Server 2012 R2 + * `win81-x64` + * `win81-x86` + * `win81-arm` +* Windows 10 / Windows Server 2016 * `win10-x64` * `win10-x86` + * `win10-arm` + * `win10-arm64` ## Linux RIDs @@ -107,19 +107,33 @@ wish to check if new ones are added, please check back here. * `ubuntu.14.04-x64` * `ubuntu.14.10-x64` * `ubuntu.15.04-x64` + * `ubuntu.15.10-x64` + * `ubuntu.16.04-x64` + * `ubuntu.16.10-x64` * CentOS * `centos.7-x64` - * `centos.7.1-x64` * Debian * `debian.8-x64` - * `debian.8.2-x64` +* Fedora + * `fedora.23-x64` + * `fedora.24-x64` +* OpenSUSE + * `opensuse.13.2-x64` + * `opensuse.42.1-x64` +* Oracle Linux + * `ol.7-x64` + * `ol.7.0-x64` + * `ol.7.1-x64` + * `ol.7.2-x64` * Currently supported Ubuntu derivatives * `linuxmint.17-x64` * `linuxmint.17.1-x64` * `linuxmint.17.2-x64` * `linuxmint.17.3-x64` + * `linuxmint.18-x64` ## OS X RIDs * `osx.10.10-x64` * `osx.10.11-x64` +* `osx.10.12-x64`