Hi Rob,

On Wed, Jan 13, 2021 at 8:58 AM Rob Landley <r...@landley.net> wrote:
> On 1/12/21 4:46 PM, Linus Walleij wrote:
> > On Tue, Jan 12, 2021 at 3:45 PM John Paul Adrian Glaubitz
> > <glaub...@physik.fu-berlin.de> wrote:
> >> Yeah, I have the same impression that's the strong commercial interest 
> >> pushes
> >> hobbyist use of the Linux kernel a bit down. A lot of these changes feel 
> >> like
> >> they're motivated by corporate decisions.
> >>
> >> There has to be a healthy balance between hobbyist and commercial use. I 
> >> understand
> >> that from a commercial point of view, it doesn't make much sense to run 
> >> Linux
> >> on a 30-year-old computer. But it's a hobbyist project for many people and 
> >> hacking
> >> Linux stuff for these old machines has a very entertaining and educational 
> >> factor.
> >
> > This is actually one of the most interesting things written in this 
> > discussion.
> >
> > I have both revamped and deleted subarchitectures in the ARM tree. We
> > never deleted anyone's pet project *unless* they were clearly unwilling to
> > work on it (such as simply testning new patches) and agreed that it will
> > not go on.
>
> Another fun aspect of old hardware is it serves as prior art for patents. The
> j-core hardware implementation schedule has in part been driven by specific
> patents expiring, as in "we can't do $FEATURE until $DATE".

Indeed, so that's why the release of j4 is postponed to 2016...
/me runs date (again).

> When I did an sh4 porting contract in 2018 I got that board updated to a
> current-ish kernel (3 versions back from then-current it hit some intermittent
> nor flash filesystem corruption that only occurred intermittently under
> sustained load; had to ship so I backed off one version and never tracked it
> down). But these days I'm not always on the same continent as my two actual 
> sh4
> hardware boards, have never gotten my physical sh2 board to boot, and $DAYJOB 
> is
> all j-core stuff not sh4.

Which is not upstream, investing in the future?

> Testing that a basic superh system still builds and boots under qemu and 
> j-core
> I can commit to doing regularly. Testing specific hardware devices on boards I
> don't regularly use is a lot harder.

I have the sh7751-based landisk in my board farm, so it's receiving
regular boot testing.  That's one of the simpler SH-based platforms,
though.

Gr{oetje,eeting}s,

                        Geert

-- 
Geert Uytterhoeven -- There's lots of Linux beyond ia32 -- ge...@linux-m68k.org

In personal conversations with technical people, I call myself a hacker. But
when I'm talking to journalists I just say "programmer" or something like that.
                                -- Linus Torvalds

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