On 10/7/18 1:45 AM, Tobias Klausmann wrote:
> Hi! 
> 
> On Sun, 07 Oct 2018, H. Peter Anvin wrote:
>>> How much bother is it to keep maintaining alpha as a supported
>>> target for glibc? Ultimately, it's a question if people want to
>>> put in the time. There will always be users as long as there is
>>> a supporting Linux distro, I guess.
>>>
>>
>> The question is about if there is a reason to support a kernel/glibc version
>> mismatch.
> 
> Do I understand correctly that the proposed change would break
> the combination of Kernel <3.2 and newer glibcs? If so, I think
> we should go ahead, 3.2 is pretty old and I would be *very*
> surprised if anyone is running that old a kernel but a new glibc.
> As you said, Alpha production started almost one and a half
> decades ago, hardware compatibility on the kernel side is very
> good (aside from weird cases like the UP1500, but even that has a
> post-3.2 kernel available).
> 
> I'm sure Matt will correct me if I'm wrong about any of this.
> 

No.  That's the case for *all* architectures right now.

Alpha as sole architecture is missing:

http://lkml.kernel.org/r/20181007033748.224461-2-...@zytor.com

... and it is still not in the kernel :(

        -hpa

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