On Tuesday, November 11, 2003, at 11:06 AM, Leigh Brown wrote:
Albert Cahalan said:
On Mon, 2003-11-10 at 22:07, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Thankfully this is not a huge undertaking as the goal is not to
create
an end to end 64 bit system. (Tho that could be done, but perhaps
that's a discussion for another day)
It's not as if the Linux apps are all 32-bit.
Due to the Alpha, Opteron, and Itanium, the
code should all be clean.
You'll be running a mix if you go this route,
keeping both libraries in memory. Yuck. Some
apps need to be 64-bit. For example, procps
must be compiled as a 64-bit executable if
you want to support a 64-bit kernel.
Not true, at least on ppc64. I've run debian on my power3
machine with a 64-bit kernel, and procps works fine. In fact,
everything runs fine. This begs the question, what will a ppc64
Debian look like? I'd guess a 64-bit kernel, 32-bit and 64-bit
toolchains, .... ?
Hmm I checked my Power3 box with SuSE on it and in that case they
had it built 64 bit. Still no biggie, I think you're right Leigh,
shouldn't be alot needed that's 64 bit ... least not initially. But
certainly
in time that can (and should) change.
I hope you'll agree this is a worthwhile endeavor and with your
support, debian support for PowerPC64 processors can be enjoyed by
all.
(Or at least those with or soon to have hardware ;-)
Eh, does Linux even run on Apple's new box?
Apparently so, but pSeries boxes should also be supported.
I agree, and don't forget iSeries boxes.
Basically I'd like to see supported:
Native on the metal, Apple G5, Power3, RS64-III, RS64-IV, Power4
and for those boxes that support it, Logical Partition iSeries & pSeries
Regards,
Tom