Hello, I'm the maintainer of gmp, but fairly ignorant of debian/m68k. Would anyone here care to comment?
Thanks, -Steve ----- Forwarded message from Kevin Ryde <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> ----- Date: Sun, 30 Mar 2003 07:46:00 +1000 From: Kevin Ryde <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Subject: Bug#186789: libgmp3: m68k maybe as m68020 To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Reply-to: Kevin Ryde <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, [EMAIL PROTECTED] X-Debian-PR-Message: report 186789 X-Debian-PR-Package: libgmp3 X-Debian-PR-Keywords: Original-recipient: rfc822;[EMAIL PROTECTED] Package: libgmp3 Version: 4.1.2-1 Severity: wishlist Is it true that debian m68k means 68020 or higher? Without having an actual debian m68k to look at, from nosing around some m68k packages I take it gcc defaults to 68020 and generates code that won't actually run on an 000 or 010. If this is so then it'd be an advantage to build gmp as m68020 similarly. gmp nowadays takes cpu type "m68k" to mean plain 68000, compiling for "m68020" should result in code that's faster, and probably a little smaller. -- System Information: Debian Release: testing/unstable Architecture: i386 Kernel: Linux blah 2.2.15 #1 Tue Apr 25 17:13:48 EST 2000 i586 Locale: LANG=C, LC_CTYPE=C Versions of packages libgmp3 depends on: ii libc6 2.3.1-15 GNU C Library: Shared libraries an -- no debconf information ----- End forwarded message -----

