On Tue, Jul 11, 2017 at 05:08:29PM -0400, Stephen John Smoogen wrote:
> On 11 July 2017 at 16:57, Josh Boyer <jwbo...@fedoraproject.org> wrote:
> > On Tue, Jul 11, 2017 at 4:41 PM, Dominik 'Rathann' Mierzejewski
> > <domi...@greysector.net> wrote:
> >> On Tuesday, 11 July 2017 at 22:26, Florian Weimer wrote:
> >>> I ran into this unannounced change:
> >>>
> >>>   https://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Changes/Stop_Building_i686_Kernels
> >>
> >> I noticed this is categorized as self-contained, which I think is wrong.
> >>
> >> I also have hardware that would no longer run Fedora after such change
> >> (a netbook with an older Intel Atom CPU which supports SSE2, but is
> >> 32bit). Unless the change proponent can provide some numbers suggesting
> >> that 32bit users are a tiny minority of our userbase, I'll probably
> >> be against such change.
> >
> > Anyone with 32-bit hardware is going to be against this change.  It is
> > a known downside.  It also doesn't change the fact that i686 kernels
> > are in a zombie state, where the kernel team does not actively support
> > them and the community has not significantly stepped up to do so.
> > That approach was done quite a while ago, and explicitly communicated.
> >
> > The fact that i686 kernels continue to work in general is basically luck.
> 
> Or that they have been broken at various times and no one noticed.

They're broken most of the time (under qemu at least).  A while back I
just stopped running the libguestfs tests on them because no one was
interested in fixing them.

Rich.

-- 
Richard Jones, Virtualization Group, Red Hat http://people.redhat.com/~rjones
Read my programming and virtualization blog: http://rwmj.wordpress.com
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