From fdfa09b5c79ee6f2645609cf72fbdacf0560a38b Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Eric Andersen Date: Fri, 8 Oct 2004 10:52:08 +0000 Subject: [PATCH] Fix the supported architectures section --- README | 15 ++++++++------- 1 file changed, 8 insertions(+), 7 deletions(-) diff --git a/README b/README index 72a560c38..bf2ae6f3f 100644 --- a/README +++ b/README @@ -31,16 +31,17 @@ If you wish to install hard links, rather than symlinks, you can use Supported architectures: - BusyBox in general will build on any architecture supported by gcc. It has - a few specialized features added for __sparc__ and __alpha__. insmod - functionality is currently limited to ARM, CRIS, H8/300, x86, ia64, - x86_64, m68k, MIPS, PowerPC, S390, SH3/4/5, Sparc, v850e, and x86_64 - for 2.4.x kernels. For 2.6.x kernels + BusyBox in general will build on any architecture supported by gcc. + Kernel module loading for 2.2 and 2.4 Linux kernels is currently + limited to ARM, CRIS, H8/300, x86, ia64, x86_64, m68k, MIPS, PowerPC, + S390, SH3/4/5, Sparc, v850e, and x86_64 for 2.4.x kernels. For 2.6.x + kernels, kernel module loading support should work on all architectures. + Supported C Libraries: uClibc and glibc are supported. People have been looking at newlib and - diet-libc, but they are currently considered unsupported, untested, or + dietlibc, but they are currently considered unsupported, untested, or worse. Linux-libc5 is no longer supported -- you should probably use uClibc instead if you want a small C library. @@ -81,7 +82,7 @@ an example: With GNU date I get the following output: $ date - Sat Mar 27 14:19:41 MST 2004 + Fri Oct 8 14:19:41 MDT 2004 But when I use BusyBox date I get this instead: