> [...] > Personally, I think it's useful to consider not merely "do we > have anybody actively maintaining this" (after all our x86 frontend > is not exactly very well-loved!) but also "are there users of QEMU > out there using it?" and "is this actually something that exists > in the real world as actual silicon in any quantity?". I think > unicore32 failed on both of those, but tilegx passes the latter > and possibly the former. > > thanks > -- PMM >
UniCore is a real silicon product, integrated into PKUnity SoC, and sold in a large amount of embedded boxes, such as cloud terminals and set top boxes. Since we provide complete product solutions, few users use QEmu directly to simulate the booting and running of unicore32-linux runtime system. For me, I still maintain unicore32 port, and I really appreciate having unicore32 port in the tree. Thanks Guan Xuetao