On 11 July 2017 at 17:03, Justin Forbes <jmfor...@linuxtx.org> wrote:
> On Tue, Jul 11, 2017 at 3:43 PM, Matthew Miller
> <mat...@fedoraproject.org> wrote:
>> On Tue, Jul 11, 2017 at 10:26:03PM +0200, Florian Weimer wrote:
>>> I ran into this unannounced change:
>>>   https://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Changes/Stop_Building_i686_Kernels
>>> If this is accepted, all x86 hardware on which Fedora can run will
>>> support SSE2, and we should reflect that in the i686 build flags.
>>> How likely is it that this proposal is accepted?  Ideally, we would know
>>> this before the mass rebuild so that we can change the compiler flags in
>>> redhat-rpm-config.
>>
>> Currently i686 users are at about 1/6th of x86_64 users, by mirror
>> checkins. I don't have an easy way of knowing how many of those i686
>> checkins are old releases -- I'll need to ask Smooge to make a custom
>> report -- but I think it's fair to guess that it's significantly tilted
>> that way. So, taking a SWAG, I'd say maybe 10% of our users would be
>> impacted. That's pretty big, but on the other hand if the cost is
>> disproportionate -- and having heard from the kernel people about this
>> for several years, I think it might be -- it's probably something we
>> should do anyway.
>>
>
> The kernel team quit "supporting" i686 several releases ago, it is
> down to community support, which is pretty much nonexistent.  Sure,
> people file bugs, but rarely do people point to or supply patches for
> those bugs.   The biggest issue is how much it is ignored by upstream
> as well. We have issues where things were never tested on i686, and
> then have to be fixed before we can release necessary and relevant
> updates which impact everyone else.   And discontinuing the i686 build
> for F27 would still mean over a year left of supported Fedora on i686
> hardware.
> When looking at those check ins, it would also be interesting to note
> which of those are running on virt or containers. Containers would
> still be possible, and 32bit userspace in virt guests with a 64bit
> kernel would still be possible. The kernel header package would still
> be built, so all other 32bit i686 packages would continue to build and
> work just fine.
>

Just to head this off. There is no way currently available to
determine if a yum/dnf update was done in a
virt/container/Workstation/Cloud/Server etc. Attempts to get that data
reportable has been stalled for N years.

> Justin
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-- 
Stephen J Smoogen.
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