Bill Davidsen wrote: > Some people are paid to develop system software, some of us have to work > for a living.[1] Hybrid systems are a PITA, if there's a need to work with > 32 bit it's vastly easier to run a 32 bit system than to try to avoid > behavioral differences between 32 and 64 bit software even when built from > the same source. If the source is behaving differently in 32-bit or 64-bit environments, the source is broken. The sooner you find out, the better. People need to stop writing non-portable code. (Hint: A long is not an int. Neither is a size_t. Use int32_t (or "int" if you need to support systems with no stdint.h, though that'll break on 16-bit systems if you need to still support those - in that case you'll have to do some #ifdef) if you need something always 32 bits, not long! Don't use int * and long * interchangeably, they're different. Don't print a size_t with %u (or worse, %d). The most portable solution is to cast it to unsigned long and print the result with %lu.) Only ever testing on 32-bit systems isn't going to help there. Kevin Kofler -- fedora-list mailing list fedora-list@xxxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe: https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-list Guidelines: http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Communicate/MailingListGuidelines