On 8/21/23 05:51, Osipov, Michael (IN IT IN) via GNU coreutils Bug Reports wrote: > in 9.3 year 2038 support with 64 bit time_t was made required [1], here > on HP-UX this is a bit problematic, but that's not the actual problem. > The diff between 9.2 and 9.3 [2] says how this can be fixed on platforms > supporting both 32 and 64 bit, on HP-UX it'd be simply '+DD64', and how > to avoid with "ac_year2038_required=no", but README-install on master > [3] still contains '--disable-year2038' which obviously does not work. > It simply needs to be updated to the content of [2]. Sorry, I don't understand. Why does --disable-year2038 not work on HP-UX for bleeding-edge coreutils on Savannah? It sounds like you're suggesting that we revert the attached patch, but I don't see how that would be correct as bleeding-edge coreutils/configure no longer looks at ac_year2038_required. > I cannot compile everything in 64 bit mode since no one has written our old applications with portability in mind. It needs to remain 32 bit for now. I suggest compiling coreutils in 64-bit mode now. You can keep compiling your other applications in 32-bit mode. Even though HP-UX's end of life is the end of 2025, it's possible you'll run across a stray HP-UX file today with timestamp after 2038, and basic coreutils apps like 'ls' should work with such files.