Common Lisp the Language
2nd Edition
For any of the following functions if no appropriate and relevant result can be produced nil is returned instead of a string.
[Function]
lisp-implementation-type
A string is returned that identifies the generic name of the particular Common Lisp implementation. Examples: "Spice LISP" "Zetalisp".
[Function]
lisp-implementation-version
A string is returned that identifies the version of the particular Common Lisp implementation; this information should be of use to maintainers of the implementation. Examples: "1192" "53.7 with complex numbers" "1746.9A NEWIO 53 ETHER 5.3".
[Function]
machine-type
A string is returned that identifies the generic name of the computer hardware on which Common Lisp is running. Examples: "IMLAC" "DEC PDP-10" "DEC VAX-11/780".
[Function]
machine-version
A string is returned that identifies the version of the computer hardware on which Common Lisp is running. Example: "KL10 microcode 9".
[Function]
machine-instance
A string is returned that identifies the particular instance of the computer hardware on which Common Lisp is running; this might be a local nickname for example or a serial number. Examples: "MIT-MC" "CMU GP-VAX".
[Function]
software-type
A string is returned that identifies the generic name of any relevant supporting software. Examples: "Spice" "TOPS-20" "ITS".
[Function]
software-version
A string is returned that identifies the version of any relevant supporting software; this information should be of use to maintainers of the implementation.
[Function]
short-site-name
long-site-name
A string is returned that identifies the physical location of the computer hardware. Examples of short names: "MIT AI Lab" "CMU-CSD". Examples of long names:
"MIT Artificial Intelligence Laboratory" "Massachusetts Institute of Technology Artificial Intelligence Laboratory" "Carnegie-Mellon University Computer Science Department"
See also user-homedir-pathname.
[Variable]
*features*
The value of the variable *features* should be a list of symbols that name ``features'' provided by the implementation. Most such names will be implementation-specific; typically a name for the implementation will be included.

One standard feature name is ieee-floating-point
which should
be present if and only if full IEEE proposed floating-point
arithmetic [23] is supported.
The value of this variable is used by the #+ and #- reader syntax.

X3J13 voted in March 1988 (SHARPSIGN-PLUS-MINUS-PACKAGE)
to specify that feature names used with #+ and #-
are read in the keyword package unless an explicit prefix
designating some other package appears. The standard
feature name ieee-floating-point is therefore actually the
keyword :ieee-floating-point
though one need not write the colon
when using it with #+ or #-; thus #+ieee-floating-point
and #+:ieee-floating-point mean the same thing.