This problem was first asked [at Mathematics Stack Exchange](https://math.stackexchange.com/questions/3956135/non-trivial-solutions-for-a-group-of-equations), where it wasn't paid much attention. Define an equation $A_n$ like the following: $$\sum^{n}_{i=1}\sum^{n}_{j=1,j\neq i}(x_{i})^{(x_j)}=(\sum^{n}_{i=1}x_i)^{(\sum^{n}_{i=1}x_i)}$$ For example, $A_3$ looks like the following equation: $${x_1}^{x_2}+{x_1}^{x_3}+{x_2}^{x_1}+{x_2}^{x_3}+{x_3}^{x_1}+{x_3}^{x_2}=({x_1}+{x_2}+{x_3})^{({x_1}+{x_2}+{x_3})}$$ Let's assume that for every **non-negative integer** solutions for $A_n$, $x_i\leq x_{i+1}$ for every $1\leq i<n$, then there are two distinct non-negetive solutions for $A_3$, one is ${x_1}=0,{x_2}=0,{x_3}=2$, and the other is ${x_1}=0,{x_2}=1,{x_3}=1$. We call a solution for $A_n$ 'non-trivial' if $x_{n-1}\neq0$. The only known non-trivial solution is ${x_1}=0,{x_2}=1,{x_3}=1$ for $A_3$. The problem is: are there any more non-trivial solutions for $A_n$? If so, please give an example. **Since this question is difficult enough, I will also recieve answers which give some features about every non-trivial solutions.**