.TH SETARCH 8 "June 2007" "util-linux" "System Administration" .SH NAME setarch \- change reported architecture in new program environment and set personality flags .SH SYNOPSIS .B setarch .I arch .RI [ options ] .RI [ program .RI [ arguments ]] .br .I arch .RI [ options ] .RI [ program .RI [ arguments ]] .SH DESCRIPTION .B setarch This utility currently only affects the output of uname -m. For example, on an AMD64 system, running 'setarch i386 program' will cause 'program' to see .IR i686 (or other relevant arch) instead of .IR x86_64 as machine type. It also allows to set various personality options. The default .B program is /bin/sh. .SH OPTIONS .TP .I "\-v," "\-\-verbose" Be verbose. .TP .I "\-h," "\-\-help" Display help (it is also displayed when setarch takes no arguments). .TP .I "\-\-uname\-2.6" Causes the program to see a kernel version number beginning with 2.6. .TP .I "\-3," "\-\-3gb" Specifies that processes should use a maximum of 3GB of address space on systems where it is supported (ADDR_LIMIT_3GB). .TP .I "\-B," "\-\-32bit" Turns on ADDR_LIMIT_32BIT. .TP .I "\-F," "\-\-fdpic-funcptrs" Userspace function pointers point to descriptors (turns on FDPIC_FUNCPTRS). .TP .I "\-I," "\-\-short-inode" Turns on SHORT_INODE. .TP .I "\-L," "\-\-addr-compat-layout" Changes the way virtual memory is allocated (turns on the ADDR_COMPAT_LAYOUT). .TP .I "\-R," "\-\-addr-no-randomize" Disables randomization of the virtual address space (turns on ADDR_NO_RANDOMIZE). .TP .I "\-S," "\-\-whole-seconds" Turns on WHOLE_SECONDS. .TP .I "\-T," "\-\-sticky-timeouts" Turns on STICKY_TIMEOUTS. .TP .I "\-X" "\-\-read-implies-exec" Turns on READ_IMPLIES_EXEC. .TP .I "\-Z," "mmap-page-zero" Turns on MMAP_PAGE_ZERO. .SH EXAMPLES setarch ppc32 rpmbuild --target=ppc --rebuild foo.src.rpm .br setarch ppc32 -v -vL3 rpmbuild --target=ppc --rebuild bar.src.rpm .br setarch ppc32 --32bit rpmbuild --target=ppc --rebuild foo.src.rpm .SH AUTHOR Elliot Lee .br Jindrich Novy .SH AVAILABILITY The setarch command is part of the util-linux package and is available from ftp://ftp.kernel.org/pub/linux/utils/util-linux/.