Hi,
   I lurk on the LKML, say hi once in awhile, ask a question once in
awhile, and try to read at least the interesting to a non-programmer
posts. I was curious about this one that came up today. Seems like
this is a natural for Gentoo.

   I have a Gentoo 64-bit setup but have had lots of troubles over the
years (far less now though) with web media and other things that need
to be more Windows compatible. (I do audio work with my Gentoo boxes -
interface to studios and a few bands, etc) I've found that my 32-bit
Gentoo installations have been more compatible than 64-bit. Outside
stuff like Java is better. In general when I have a problem I wonder
if it's because I'm running 64-bit.

   How would one go about building a 64-bit kernel on a 32-bit machine
with Gentoo? I presume that's mostly just how I configure the kernel,
along with maybe some cross-compile options? Are there any projects
going on in this area where I might become a test case? Wiki? Docs?

   Do others see value - getting 64-bit memory management, new CPU
flags, etc., but keeping the apps 32-bit for compatibility?

Take care,
Mark

<SNIP>
On Tue, 9 Jun 2009, H. Peter Anvin wrote:
>
> A major problem is that distros don't seem to be willing to push 64-bit
> kernels for 32-bit distros.  There are a number of good (and
> not-so-good) reasons why users may want to run a 32-bit userspace, but
> not running a 64-bit kernel on capable hardware is just problematic.

Yeah, that's just stupid. A 64-bit kernel should work well with 32-bit
tools, and while we've occasionally had compat issues (the intel gfx
people used to claim that they needed to work with a 32-bit kernel because
they cared about 32-bit tools), they aren't unfixable or even all _that_
common.

And they'd be even less common if the whole "64-bit kernel even if you do
a 32-bit distro" was more common.

The nice thing about a 64-bit kernel is that you should be able to build
one even if you don't in general have all the 64-bit libraries. So you
don't need a full 64-bit development environment, you just need a compiler
that can generate code for both (and that should be the default on x86
these days).

                       Linus
<SNIP>

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