On Tue, 17 Mar 1998, Pedro J. Lobo wrote:
> I'll try it immediately, but I have a suggestion. On my DU 3.2c system, cc
> defines automatically the symbols "__osf__" and "__alpha", and gcc defines
> "__osf__", "__alpha" and "__alpha__". I think it would be easier to change
> every "#ifdef alpha" to "#ifdef __alpha", and stop worrying about it in
> the Makefiles.
>
> Can any of the linux-alpha folks try out which symbols does the compiler
> define? And someone who has DU 4.0x installed?
Linux/Alpha provides the following useful/relavent symbols:
linux
__alpha
__alpha__
__linux
__linux__
I had gone through the pgsql 6.2.1 source trying to fix/replace
all instances of 'linuxalpha' and such used as defines with '(defined
__alpha__) && (defined __linux__)'. But I hit a few snags in testing (i.e.
lack of time), and by the time I got things about sorted out, 6.3 came out
and changed so much I need to go through again and do it all anew. The
baisc problem it looks like you hit as well, is that non-standard define
names were used, and then never included in the platform specific defines.
This was the reason Linux/Alpha couldn't even get initdb to run (probably
same for you). Of course, the regression tests are still not perfect, and
there is a good deal of cleanup on the Linux/Alpha end of things as well.
It will be a while, but things are moving.
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| Ryan Kirkpatrick | Boulder, Colorado | rkirkpat@nag.cs.colorado.edu |
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