I agree with you (bash is part of OSX), but the information on the processor is contained in the computer and used by the "traditionnal" installers. The question is : how could we retrieve this information in fink or how is it possible to change the environnement variables in a script ? If this maniplation is licit and do not cause any troubles in others applications, which values could we set ?
Stéphane. Le 15 juin 06 à 22:28, Brian Bannister a écrit : >>>>> I have a powerbook intel duo core, but when I launch the command >>>> "set" in >>>>> an xterm, I obtain, in particular, the following lines : >>>>> >>>>> BASH_VERSINFO=([0]="2" [1]="05b" [2]="0" [3]="1" [4]="release" >>>>> [5]="powerpc-apple-darwin8.0") >>>>> HOSTTYPE=powerpc >>>>> MACHTYPE=powerpc-apple-darwin8.0 >>>>> > > I tried removing fink (actually moving /sw to /sw.intel) and > rebooting, > so I should be using Apple's bash and startup. I still see the powerpc > environment variables: > > ST:~ brian$ set | grep powerpc > BASH_VERSINFO=([0]="2" [1]="05b" [2]="0" [3]="1" [4]="release" > [5]="powerpc-apple-darwin8.0") > HOSTTYPE=powerpc > MACHTYPE=powerpc-apple-darwin8.0 > > So that seems to be an issue with OS X, not fink. I'm running the > standard release of OS X 10.4.6. > > __________________________________________________ > Do You Yahoo!? > Tired of spam? Yahoo! Mail has the best spam protection around > http://mail.yahoo.com _______________________________________________ Fink-beginners mailing list [email protected] https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/fink-beginners
