On 09/05/2011 22:28, Nick Sabalausky wrote:
"Spacen Jasset"<spacenjas...@yahoo.co.uk>  wrote in message
news:iq69q1$1ack$1...@digitalmars.com...
It should work,but again is depends what your target platform is. It's
quite important that - Even on windows. At the company I am now
contracting for we compile the software agents using visual studio 2003
because later versions do not let the agent work with windows 98. This is
not just a Linux phenomenon.

Centos 4 is fairly new, and it's possible that your hosting providers use
older, even unsupported versions of distributions. Centos 3 might have
been a wiser bet. In any case centos 4.7 is a point release of 4.0 and as
such there should be no breaking libc changes.


I noticed the 4.7+ installers have an option for i586, but there seems to be
a lot of conflicting info about whether the non-i586 install is i386 or
i686. Any idea? I've heard that CentOS 5 is i686 despite claiming to be
i386, but I can't find any concrete info about whether that's true of 4.x as
well.


Well It shouldn't matter, as long as it doesn't day x86_64, in which case it's 64 bit. i.e. parts of the kernel may use i686 instructions, if available, which doesn't matter for you at all I guess. It's got nothing to do with dmd. Or ld unless you tell it to generate something for a specific processor.

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