From nobody@FreeBSD.ORG Thu Jul 15 07:12:20 1999
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Date: Thu, 15 Jul 1999 07:12:20 -0700 (PDT)
From: pavel_roskin@geocities.com
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To: freebsd-gnats-submit@freebsd.org
Subject: "uname -m" says i386 for Intel Celeron
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>Number:         12653
>Category:       i386
>Synopsis:       "uname -m" says i386 for Intel Celeron
>Confidential:   no
>Severity:       non-critical
>Priority:       medium
>Responsible:    freebsd-bugs
>State:          closed
>Quarter:        
>Keywords:       
>Date-Required:  
>Class:          sw-bug
>Submitter-Id:   current-users
>Arrival-Date:   Thu Jul 15 07:20:00 PDT 1999
>Closed-Date:    Thu Jul 15 15:17:07 PDT 1999
>Last-Modified:  Thu Jul 15 15:20:10 PDT 1999
>Originator:     Pavel Roskin
>Release:        3.2-RELEASE
>Organization:
Contex Ltd., Siant Petersburg, Russia
>Environment:
FreeBSD liverpool.typhoon.spb.ru 3.2-RELEASE FreeBSD 3.2-RELEASE #0: Tue May 18
04:05:08 GMT 1999     jkh@cathair:/usr/src/sys/compile/GENERIC  i386
>Description:
"uname -m" should print the processor type.
This command prints i386 for Intel Celeron 333MHz
Because of that config.guess prints i386-unknown-freebsdelf3.2
This may disable i686-specific optimizations in some programs.
"uname -m" on Linux prints i686

>How-To-Repeat:
uname -m
on any Intel processor other than i386

>Fix:


>Release-Note:
>Audit-Trail:
State-Changed-From-To: open->closed 
State-Changed-By: hoek 
State-Changed-When: Thu Jul 15 15:17:07 PDT 1999 
State-Changed-Why:  
Well, "uname -m" is supposed to printout "i386" for the Celeron.  It does 
the same for the latest and greatest Xeon, too, I would hope. 

That's why config.guess is called config._guess_. 
>Unformatted:
