Try $ machine Apparently "arch" is not only old (the latest release was in July 2010), but it does not differentiate between Intel-32 and Intel-64.
On my own Mac (proven to be 64-bit :) arch returns "i386", machine returns "x86_64h". Oh, and do hook up BB-10 to LTE - an absolute must for running 64-bit stuff on Macs. :-) :) :) Sent from my BlackBerry 10 smartphone on the Verizon Wireless 4G LTE network. Original Message From: Ben Laurie Sent: Monday, March 7, 2016 04:22 To: OpenSSL development Reply To: openssl-dev@openssl.org Subject: Re: [openssl-dev] MacOS defaults? On 6 March 2016 at 22:40, Viktor Dukhovni <openssl-us...@dukhovni.org> wrote: > >> On Mar 6, 2016, at 12:00 PM, Ben Laurie <b...@links.org> wrote: >> >> Hmm. So why do I see this on my macbook? >> >> $ arch >> i386 > > Try "uname -m" x86_64 But AIUI, uname -m tells me what hardware I've got, arch tells me what mode it is running in... -- openssl-dev mailing list To unsubscribe: https://mta.openssl.org/mailman/listinfo/openssl-dev
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