Update required kernel version and note that libc5 is no longer
supported (it is unmaintained and lacks support for simple things such as stdint.h) and uClibc is a better choice these days anyways.
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7
README
7
README
@ -41,13 +41,14 @@ Supported architectures:
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Supported libcs:
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glibc-2.0.x, glibc-2.1.x, glibc-2.2.x, Linux-libc5, uClibc. People
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glibc-2.0.x, glibc-2.1.x, glibc-2.2.x, glibc-2.3.x, uClibc. People
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are looking at newlib and diet-libc, but consider them unsupported,
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untested, or worse.
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untested, or worse. Linux-libc5 is no longer supported -- you
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should probably use uClibc instead if you want a small C library.
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Supported kernels:
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Full functionality requires Linux 2.0.x or better. A large fraction of the
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Full functionality requires Linux 2.2.x or better. A large fraction of the
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code should run on just about anything. While the current code is fairly
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Linux specific, it should be fairly easy to port the majority of the code
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to, say, FreeBSD or Solaris, or MacOsX, or even Windows (if you are into that
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