Date: Sun, 29 Aug 2004 16:07:44 -0700 From: Sean McNeil <sean@mcneil.com> To: obrien@freebsd.org Cc: freebsd-amd64@freebsd.org Subject: Re: cvsup on amd64 just broke today Message-ID: <1093820864.65009.9.camel@server.mcneil.com> In-Reply-To: <20040829225314.GE92947@dragon.nuxi.com> References: <20040809184110.V80973@carver.gumbysoft.com> <XFMail.20040809205443.conrads@cox.net> <20040829225314.GE92947@dragon.nuxi.com>
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Hi David, Finally catching up on your email? ;) On Sun, 2004-08-29 at 15:53, David O'Brien wrote: > On Mon, Aug 09, 2004 at 08:54:43PM -0500, Conrad J. Sabatier wrote: > > On 10-Aug-2004 Doug White wrote: > > > On Mon, 9 Aug 2004, Conrad J. Sabatier wrote: > > >> # make update > > >> -------------------------------------------------------------- > > >> >>> Running /usr/local/bin/cvsup > > >> -------------------------------------------------------------- > > >> /usr/local/libexec/cvsup-static.i386.bin: 1: Syntax error: "(" > > >> unexpected > > >> *** Error code 2 > > > > > > Can you run cvsup manually? It appears to be trying to execute a > > > binary as a shell script here. > > > > Tried that, got the same result. > > > > I hadn't noticed it before, but it does strike me as odd that the > > binary package for amd64 would include a file with "i386" in the name, > > and which is, in fact, an ELF 32 binary. > > Why is it odd?!? > The ability to run legacy 32-bit x86 binaries under a 64-bit OS at > full-speed is one of the huge capabilities AMD brought with this > architecture. Unless a binary does 64-bit math or addresses >4GB of > memory why does something need to be 64-bit??? This is a little misleading. You are throwing out the fact that the amd64 has additional features in 64-bit mode that can significantly increase performance. Such as extra registers. > The fact that all Open Source OS's have a 64-bit userland on all their > 64-bit platforms that grew up from 32-bit CPU's shows how unsophisticated > our build framework is. "64-bit" Solaris today is really a 64-bit kernel > and mostly 32-bit userland. Except Solaris has identical architectures that were extended to 64-bit. amd64 is a slightly different story. > > Did something change today that would effect the handling of such a > > file, perhaps? > > Nope, it has been a 32-bit 'i386' binary since the day the port started > supporting FreeBSD/AMD64. This is a huge advantage that will hopefully be exploited more as time goes by. Tim has my extreme gratitude for adding Linux32 support. It has been a great help to me. FreeBSD32 support not so much. But I really miss a JVM and Eclipse. Maybe one day I will have the time to pursue this. Sean (one satisfied amd64 owner)
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