Hi, this comes up from time to time in porting issues when configuration and wanna-be scripts parse the output of uname -m.
On GNU/Linux, this gives "i686" here. On GNU/Hurd, it gives "i386-AT386". Usually easy enough to fix, but does anybody remember what the AT386 stands for, what in general comes after the dash, and if this is a conscious decision (eg deliberately different for a good reason), or just the case that it was never given any attention. Because if that's just a weirdo, fixing that might just give that change-once-and-stop-worrying experience in porting packages. Thanks, Marcus -- `Rhubarb is no Egyptian god.' Debian http://www.debian.org [EMAIL PROTECTED] Marcus Brinkmann GNU http://www.gnu.org [EMAIL PROTECTED] [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://www.marcus-brinkmann.de _______________________________________________ Bug-hurd mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://mail.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/bug-hurd