Arturo Fernandez <afernan...@odyhpc.com> writes: Just for clarification, I'm no longer seeing the 'm4-ccas: Permission denied' error. I started on a fresh system (cloud-based) running CentOS8.4, unpacked gmp-6.2.99-20211010014524 and simply run ./configure, which returned: Version: GNU MP 6.2.99 Host type: nehalem-pc-linux-gnu
What evidence do you have for this system being an Ice Lake? And even if it is, you're presumably using a virtualised system (being in "the cloud") and virtualisers are sometimes configured to pretend the CPU is of a different type than they actually are. This was my original problem, which is that configure is not picking up IceLake and assigning nehalem to the host type. I'm not sure if the GMPLIB Team is testing these new patches on IceLake HW but it might be worth considering before releasing a stable version. Sneer will not inspire us helping you. It might be the case that GMP doesn't recognise every family/model which Intel uses for Ice lake. If you show us that the cpuid instruction returns for you system, then we can tell where the problem lies. -- Torbjörn Please encrypt, key id 0xC8601622 _______________________________________________ gmp-bugs mailing list gmp-bugs@gmplib.org https://gmplib.org/mailman/listinfo/gmp-bugs