On Sun, 12 Dec 2010 17:08:24 -0500 Peter A wrote:
Over the past few years, i386 has become a synonym for 32bit rather than "it will run on a 80386". The RPM package for the kernel is correctly labeled as i686, its just the name of the distro that remained i386.
That's why I'm asking whether or not it would make more sense to rename the distro to i686 instead. It might make perfect sense in a very colloquial way but from a technical point of view i386 suggests 32-bit 80386 compatibility. Either way, it's just a suggestion and general wondering since I wasn't aware of what i386 had become in the US.
The main reason for the higher requirements is the CMOV instruction. Search google for i386 CMOV and you will find the reason why and that this affects most other distributions the same way.
I'm familiar with the CMOV instruction. I wasn't aware that it wasn't part of Intel's initial 80386 32-bit instruction set, thanks a lot. Funnily enough I found unanswered questions on the Ubuntu forums inquiring whether their i386 ISO wasn't really i386 because it didn't load on an 80386 processor ;)
I've installed CentOS 4.8 by the way. Takes a while to load but once it's up and running it's surprisingly fast on that 500 MHz 'beast' :)
Best, Martin