X-Git-Url: https://git.exim.org/exim.git/blobdiff_plain/bebaf0fc16f62691e9b05a939cb83947f4c5e415..7b6f3bd52dc20f14fe0e73859e4d63e5668bc97c:/src/scripts/os-type diff --git a/src/scripts/os-type b/src/scripts/os-type index 60d1730df..a188c4a56 100755 --- a/src/scripts/os-type +++ b/src/scripts/os-type @@ -1,5 +1,4 @@ #! /bin/sh -# $Cambridge: exim/src/scripts/os-type,v 1.3 2005/04/06 10:53:47 ph10 Exp $ # Shell script to determine the operating system type. Some of the heuristics # herein have accumulated over the years and may not strictly be needed now, @@ -83,6 +82,7 @@ linux) os=Linux;; linux-*) os=Linux;; Linux-*) os=Linux;; netbsd*) os=NetBSD;; +NetBSD*) os=NetBSD;; openbsd*) os=OpenBSD;; osf1) os=OSF1;; qnx*) os=QNX;; @@ -125,22 +125,11 @@ SunOS5) case `uname -m` in esac ;; -# In the case of Linux we need to distinguish which libc is used. -# This is more cautious than it needs to be. In practice libc5 will always -# be a symlink, and libc6 will always be a linker control file, but it's -# easy enough to do a better check, and check the symlink destination or the -# control file contents and make sure. - -Linux) if [ -L /usr/lib/libc.so ]; then - if [ x"$(file /usr/lib/libc.so | grep "libc.so.5")"x != xx ]; then - os=Linux-libc5 - fi - else - if grep -q libc.so.5 /usr/lib/libc.so; then - os=Linux-libc5 - fi - fi - ;; +# In the case of Linux we used to distinguish which libc was used so that +# the old libc5 was supported as well as the current glibc. This support +# was giving some people problems, so it was removed in June 2005, under +# the assumption that nobody would be using libc5 any more (it is over seven +# years old). # In the case of NetBSD we need to distinguish between a.out, ELF # and COFF binary formats. However, a.out and COFF are the same