On 9/6/07, Mike Frysinger <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > On Tuesday 04 September 2007, John David Anglin wrote:
> > Nominally, the first part of the target string represents the > > architecture of the kernel, and not the userspace architecture. > > This is not sufficient to configure runtime applications when multiple > > architectures are supported by one kernel. > > i'm not terribly familiar with the breadth of the parisc family, but isnt > 64bit only available with 2.0 ? so it'd be pretty clean on Linux to say: > hppa64-*-linux-* means 64bit userland, everything else is 32bit Seems you misunderstood jda's above comment. We do not have a 64bit userland on hppa. the 'hppa64' part of the target string represents the architecture of the /kernel/. 64bit kernels run a 32bit userland, hence hppa64-linux should be treated (so far) as hppa-linux. T-Bone -- Thibaut VARENE http://www.parisc-linux.org/~varenet/ -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]