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Full Discussion: Cannot execute binary file
Operating Systems Linux Fedora Cannot execute binary file Post 302856299 by fedora18 on Monday 23rd of September 2013 02:53:33 PM
Old 09-23-2013
Cannot execute binary file

Hi all,

Probably somewhat of an obvous problem here but i'm no pro.

I just bought a PengPod1000 at pengpod.com
On it I have an image of Fedora 18.

I am trying to run an application I wrote for Fedora 14 32 bit desktop on this tablet. With all permissions setup using chmod but I get "cannot execute binary file".

On the PengPod "uname -a" returns:
Linux localhost.localdomain 3.0.57+ #5 PREEMPT Mon May 13 09:10:40 CEST 2013 armv71 armv71 GNU/Linux

On my development computer "uname -a" returns:
Linux sensorbox2 2.6.35.6-45.fc14.i686 #1 SMP Mon Oct 18 23:56:17 UTC 2010 i686 i686 i386 GNU/Linux

On both systems "file myapp" returns:
myapp: ELF 32-bit LSB executable, Intel 80386, version 1 (SYSV), dynamically linked (uses shared libs), for GNU/Linux 2.6.32, BuildID[shal]=0xeda499c66fce7811472888d5004ec6d45f56712f, not stripped

Other than the two kernels being different versions here the main difference is that the PengPod using the ARM architecture which I am very unfamiliar with.

Any ideas?


Thanks in advance!

---------- Post updated at 02:53 PM ---------- Previous update was at 02:52 PM ----------

the fedora image is at:

barrydegraaff.tk/2013/05/pengpod1000-fedora-18-xfce-armhf.html

Thanks in advance!
 

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PHP_UNAME(3)								 1							      PHP_UNAME(3)

php_uname - Returns information about the operating system PHP is running on

SYNOPSIS
string php_uname ([string $mode = "a"]) DESCRIPTION
php_uname(3) returns a description of the operating system PHP is running on. This is the same string you see at the very top of the phpinfo(3) output. For the name of just the operating system, consider using the PHP_OS constant, but keep in mind this constant will con- tain the operating system PHP was built on. On some older UNIX platforms, it may not be able to determine the current OS information in which case it will revert to displaying the OS PHP was built on. This will only happen if your uname() library call either doesn't exist or doesn't work. PARAMETERS
o $mode -$mode is a single character that defines what information is returned: o 'a': This is the default. Contains all modes in the sequence "s n r v m". o 's': Operating system name. eg. FreeBSD. o 'n': Host name. eg. localhost.example.com. o 'r': Release name. eg. 5.1.2-RELEASE. o 'v': Version information. Varies a lot between operating systems. o 'm': Machine type. eg. i386. RETURN VALUES
Returns the description, as a string. EXAMPLES
Example #1 Some php_uname(3) examples <?php echo php_uname(); echo PHP_OS; /* Some possible outputs: Linux localhost 2.4.21-0.13mdk #1 Fri Mar 14 15:08:06 EST 2003 i686 Linux FreeBSD localhost 3.2-RELEASE #15: Mon Dec 17 08:46:02 GMT 2001 FreeBSD Windows NT XN1 5.1 build 2600 WINNT */ if (strtoupper(substr(PHP_OS, 0, 3)) === 'WIN') { echo 'This is a server using Windows!'; } else { echo 'This is a server not using Windows!'; } ?> There are also some related Predefined PHP constants that may come in handy, for example: Example #2 A few OS related constant examples <?php // *nix echo DIRECTORY_SEPARATOR; // / echo PHP_SHLIB_SUFFIX; // so echo PATH_SEPARATOR; // : // Win* echo DIRECTORY_SEPARATOR; // echo PHP_SHLIB_SUFFIX; // dll echo PATH_SEPARATOR; // ; ?> SEE ALSO
phpversion(3), php_sapi_name(3), phpinfo(3). PHP Documentation Group PHP_UNAME(3)
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