On Sep 3, 2013, at 23:48 , Ryan Schmidt <ryandes...@macports.org> wrote:

> 
> On Sep 3, 2013, at 16:30, Peter Danecek wrote:
> 
>> So what I now would like to do is setting the `globus_flavor`.
>> 
>> At the moment I hardcode this:
>> 
>> # hardcode for now
>> set globus_flavor gcc64pthr
>> 
>> 
>> The output of `/opt/local/sbin/gpt-query globus_gssapi_gsi` is the following:
>> 
>> petr% /opt/local/sbin/gpt-query globus_gssapi_gsi 
>> 3 packages were found in /opt/local that matched your query:
>> 
>> packages found that matched your query 
>> globus_gssapi_gsi-gcc64pthr-dev pkg version: 10.7.6
>> globus_gssapi_gsi-gcc64pthr-rtl pkg version: 10.7.6
>> globus_gssapi_gsi-noflavor-doc pkg version: 10.7.6
>> petr% 
>> 
>> 
>> In the shell I would do something like this:
>> 
>> /opt/local/sbin/gpt-query globus_gssapi_gsi | grep globus_gssapi_gsi | awk 
>> -F- 'NR==1 {print $2}'
>> 
>> How to do something equivalent in TCL?
> 
> First we should figure out if that's the correct thing to do.
> 
> On your system this produces "gcc64pthr". Under what circumstances would it 
> produce a different value?
> 

Actually this is inspired by the install guide to uberftp (see here: 
http://dims.ncsa.illinois.edu/set/uberftp/install.html) and at least on my Mac 
OS X 10.5 system this would produce gcc32pthr. But maybe you right and in the 
context of could just make a simple distinction between 32bit and 64bit systems.





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