System: Microsoft Windows XP Home Edition CPUs: Intel(R) Atom(TM) CPU N270 @1.60GHz setup for the 'Git for Windows' with MSYS2 gcc-6.1.0 plus utilties and libraries were added http://nurmi-labs.blogspot.com/2016/11/git.html obviously, with Home Edition, no network was setup http://nurmi-labs.blogspot.com/p/xapian-ms.html System: Slackware Linux (version 14.0) CPUs: Intel(R) Atom(TM) CPU N270 @1.60GHz with Slackware-14.0, also with no network setup http://nurmi-labs.blogspot.com/p/xapian-linux.html System: Slackware Linux (version 14.0) CPUs: Intel(R) Atom(TM) CPU N270 @1.60GHz for comparison (same hardware) summary of 'make check' run on xapian-core-1.2.21, also without a network setup http://nurmi-labs.blogspot.com/2015/10/xapian.html NB: The mingw-w64-xapian-core-1.4.1-1.src.tar.xz extracted copy states that the sources contained therein were from the xapian website.
On Wed, Dec 07, 2016 at 04:38:15AM +0000, Eric Lindblad wrote:> System: Slackware Linux (version 14.0) > CPUs: Intel(R) Atom(TM) CPU N270 @1.60GHz > > with Slackware-14.0, also with no network setup > > http://nurmi-labs.blogspot.com/p/xapian-linux.htmlI suspect those test failures are due to --disable-sse. You shouldn't use this option unless you really need to support historic x86 hardware, as it affects correctness - it's not just some speed tweak (though it does also help the speed). The CPU you quote the details of seems to support SSE (up to SSSE3): http://www.cpu-world.com/CPUs/Atom/Intel-Atom%20N270%20AU80586GE025D.html> http://nurmi-labs.blogspot.com/p/xapian-ms.htmlFor some reason there's no output in the log from apitest.exe, so it's hard to say what's up there. But it could be --disable-sse again. Cheers, Olly