> From: Jeroen van den Muyzenberg <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> > Date: Mon, 25 Feb 2002 22:39:57 +1100 (EST) > > Good example is OpenLDAP, autoconf used there recognised (incorrectly) our > Cray as a C90 ('twas good enough). Recent versions of autoconf have dropped > that.
That's not an Autoconf issue; it's a config.guess issue. You'll need to write to the config.guess maintainer, at [EMAIL PROTECTED] However, before you do that, please try upgrading to the latest version at ftp://ftp.gnu.org/pub/gnu/config/, as config.guess has had several Cray patches in the last few weeks, and perhaps your bug has been fixed already. > I am suprised that there is (and I could be interpreting this > incorrectly) some resistance to including new architecture/OS > templates. I don't think that's the issue. Autoconf generally does not use templates (i.e. it does not use the config.guess approach). Instead of determining whether you're using a Cray or an x86 or whatever, Autoconf-generated scripts try to see whether your host supports a particular small feature, and to do so one small feature at a time. Sometimes the Autoconf philosophy doesn't work for one reason or another, so it has to fall back on config.guess. But this is a sign of weakness, not of strength. From Autoconf's point of view, config.guess should be used only as a last resort.