machine=alpha opsys=osf1
;;
- alpha-*-linux* )
- machine=alpha opsys=linux
+ alpha-*-linux* | alpha-*-lignux* )
+ machine=alpha opsys=lignux
;;
## Altos 3068
*-esix5* ) opsys=esix5r4; NON_GNU_CPP=/usr/lib/cpp ;;
*-esix* ) opsys=esix ;;
*-xenix* ) opsys=xenix ;;
- *-linux* ) opsys=linux ;;
+ *-linux* | *-lignux* ) opsys=lignux ;;
*-sco3.2v4* ) opsys=sco4 ; NON_GNU_CPP=/lib/cpp ;;
*-bsd386* | *-bsdi1* ) opsys=bsd386 ;;
*-bsdi2* ) opsys=bsdos2 ;;
esac
;;
- ## Linux/68k
- m68k-*-linux* )
- machine=m68k opsys=linux
+ ## Lignux/68k
+ m68k-*-linux* | m68k-*-lignux* )
+ machine=m68k opsys=lignux
;;
* )
AC_AIX
dnl checks for header files
-AC_CHECK_HEADERS(sys/select.h sys/timeb.h sys/time.h unistd.h utime.h)
+AC_CHECK_HEADERS(sys/select.h sys/timeb.h sys/time.h unistd.h utime.h linux/version.h)
AC_HEADER_STDC
AC_HEADER_TIME
AC_DECL_SYS_SIGLIST
### and REAL_CFLAGS (which we use for real compilation).
### The two are the same except on a few systems, where they are made
### different to work around various lossages. For example,
-### GCC 2.5 on Linux needs them to be different because it treats -g
+### GCC 2.5 on Lignux needs them to be different because it treats -g
### as implying static linking.
### If the CFLAGS env var is specified, we use that value
export LD_RUN_PATH
fi
- if test "${opsys}" = "linux"; then
+ if test "${opsys}" = "lignux"; then
AC_MSG_CHECKING(whether X on GNU/Linux needs -b to link)
AC_TRY_LINK([],
[XOpenDisplay ("foo");],