From f1b71c9fe7dbb4886588a036399cf5ebe16b7c47 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Jannis Hoffmann Date: Tue, 9 Jul 2024 11:44:11 +0200 Subject: removed top level directory --- sqmail-4.3.07/src/find-systype.sh | 144 -------------------------------------- 1 file changed, 144 deletions(-) delete mode 100755 sqmail-4.3.07/src/find-systype.sh (limited to 'sqmail-4.3.07/src/find-systype.sh') diff --git a/sqmail-4.3.07/src/find-systype.sh b/sqmail-4.3.07/src/find-systype.sh deleted file mode 100755 index 16266d3..0000000 --- a/sqmail-4.3.07/src/find-systype.sh +++ /dev/null @@ -1,144 +0,0 @@ -# oper-:arch-:syst-:chip-:kern- -# oper = operating system type; e.g., sunos-4.1.4 -# arch = machine language; e.g., sparc -# syst = which binaries can run; e.g., sun4 -# chip = chip model; e.g., micro-2-80 -# kern = kernel version; e.g., sun4m -# dependence: arch --- chip -# \ \ -# oper --- syst --- kern -# so, for example, syst is interpreted in light of oper, but chip is not. -# anyway, no slashes, no extra colons, no uppercase letters. -# the point of the extra -'s is to ease parsing: can add hierarchies later. -# e.g., *:i386-*:*:pentium-*:* would handle pentium-100 as well as pentium, -# and i386-486 (486s do have more instructions, you know) as well as i386. -# the idea here is to include ALL useful available information. - -exec 2>/dev/null -sys="`uname -s | tr '/:[A-Z]' '..[a-z]'`" -if [ x"$sys" != x ] -then - unamer="`uname -r | tr /: ..`" - unamem="`uname -m | tr /: ..`" - unamev="`uname -v | tr /: ..`" - - case "$sys" in - bsd.os) - # in bsd 4.4, uname -v does not have useful info. - # in bsd 4.4, uname -m is arch, not chip. - oper="$sys-$unamer" - arch="$unamem" - syst="" - chip="`sysctl -n hw.model`" - kern="" - ;; - freebsd) - # see above about bsd 4.4 - oper="$sys-$unamer" - arch="$unamem" - syst="" - chip="`sysctl -n hw.model`" # hopefully - kern="" - ;; - netbsd) - # see above about bsd 4.4 - oper="$sys-$unamer" - arch="$unamem" - syst="" - chip="`sysctl -n hw.model`" # hopefully - kern="" - ;; - linux) - # as in bsd 4.4, uname -v does not have useful info. - oper="$sys-$unamer" - syst="" - chip="$unamem" - kern="" - case "$chip" in - i386|i486|i586|i686) - arch="i386" - ;; - alpha) - arch="alpha" - ;; - esac - ;; - aix) - # naturally IBM has to get uname -r and uname -v backwards. dorks. - oper="$sys-$unamev-$unamer" - arch="`arch | tr /: ..`" - syst="" - chip="$unamem" - kern="" - ;; - sunos) - oper="$sys-$unamer-$unamev" - arch="`(uname -p || mach) | tr /: ..`" - syst="`arch | tr /: ..`" - chip="$unamem" # this is wrong; is there any way to get the real info? - kern="`arch -k | tr /: ..`" - ;; - unix_sv) - oper="$sys-$unamer-$unamev" - arch="`uname -m`" - syst="" - chip="$unamem" - kern="" - ;; - *) - oper="$sys-$unamer-$unamev" - arch="`arch | tr /: ..`" - syst="" - chip="$unamem" - kern="" - ;; - esac -else - $CC -c trycpp.c - $LD -o trycpp trycpp.o - case `./trycpp` in - nextstep) - oper="nextstep-`hostinfo | sed -n 's/^[ ]*NeXT Mach \([^:]*\):.*$/\1/p'`" - arch="`hostinfo | sed -n 's/^Processor type: \(.*\) (.*)$/\1/p' | tr /: ..`" - syst="" - chip="`hostinfo | sed -n 's/^Processor type: .* (\(.*\))$/\1/p' | tr ' /:' '...'`" - kern="" - ;; - *) - oper="unknown" - arch="" - syst="" - chip="" - kern="" - ;; - esac - rm -f trycpp.o trycpp -fi - -case "$chip" in -80486) - # let's try to be consistent here. (BSD/OS) - chip=i486 - ;; -i486DX) - # respect the hyphen hierarchy. (FreeBSD) - chip=i486-dx - ;; -i486.DX2) - # respect the hyphen hierarchy. (FreeBSD) - chip=i486-dx2 - ;; -Intel.586) - # no, you nitwits, there is no such chip. (NeXTStep) - chip=pentium - ;; -i586) - # no, you nitwits, there is no such chip. (Linux) - chip=pentium - ;; -i686) - # STOP SAYING THAT! (Linux) - chip=ppro -esac - -echo "$oper-:$arch-:$syst-:$chip-:$kern-" | tr ' [A-Z]' '.[a-z]' -- cgit v1.2.3