All major distributions do support libseccomp version >= 2.3.0, so there
is no need to special-case on various architectures any longer.

Signed-off-by: Helge Deller <del...@gmx.de>

diff --git a/configure b/configure
index 1c563a7027..8fe4fc84d8 100755
--- a/configure
+++ b/configure
@@ -2377,36 +2369,16 @@ fi
 ##########################################
 # libseccomp check

-libseccomp_minver="2.2.0"
 if test "$seccomp" != "no" ; then
-    case "$cpu" in
-    i386|x86_64|mips)
-        ;;
-    arm|aarch64)
-        libseccomp_minver="2.2.3"
-        ;;
-    ppc|ppc64|s390x)
-        libseccomp_minver="2.3.0"
-        ;;
-    *)
-        libseccomp_minver=""
-        ;;
-    esac
-
-    if test "$libseccomp_minver" != "" &&
-       $pkg_config --atleast-version=$libseccomp_minver libseccomp ; then
+    libseccomp_minver="2.3.0"
+    if $pkg_config --atleast-version=$libseccomp_minver libseccomp ; then
         seccomp_cflags="$($pkg_config --cflags libseccomp)"
         seccomp_libs="$($pkg_config --libs libseccomp)"
         seccomp="yes"
     else
         if test "$seccomp" = "yes" ; then
-            if test "$libseccomp_minver" != "" ; then
-                feature_not_found "libseccomp" \
-                    "Install libseccomp devel >= $libseccomp_minver"
-            else
-                feature_not_found "libseccomp" \
-                    "libseccomp is not supported for host cpu $cpu"
-            fi
+            feature_not_found "libseccomp" \
+                 "Install libseccomp devel >= $libseccomp_minver"
         fi
         seccomp="no"
     fi



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