Nice answer. Thank you!

2014-02-15 9:41 GMT+08:00 Brian Anderson <[email protected]>:

>  This may be the most canonical description of target triples (autoconf
> config names): https://sourceware.org/autobook/autobook/autobook_17.html
>
> Triples are just a short way of identifying a compilation target, and
> their naming is mostly out of our hands, established by historical
> precedent. The individual components of the triple mean very little - it's
> generally the entire string used to identify a platform. "unknown" is a
> common vendor name where there's no obvious vendor, shows up a lot in linux
> triples, though `x86_64-pc-linux-gnu` is also common; "-gnu" probably means
> the target has a GNU userspace.
>
>
> On 02/14/2014 05:16 PM, Liigo Zhuang wrote:
>
>  Hello Rusties:
>
>  I'm using Debian 7.4 Linux, not "unknown linux" obviously.
> And I don't know the meaning of `-gnu`.
>
>  On Windows, that it `x86-pc-mingw32`, which is quite meaningful to
> understand.
>
>  Thank you.
>
>  --
> by *Liigo*, http://blog.csdn.net/liigo/
>  Google+  https://plus.google.com/105597640837742873343/
>
>
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-- 
by *Liigo*, http://blog.csdn.net/liigo/
Google+  https://plus.google.com/105597640837742873343/
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