On Wed, Apr 17, 2013 at 7:47 PM, Robert Moskowitz <rgm@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > On 04/17/2013 01:52 PM, Peter Robinson wrote: >> >> On Wed, Apr 17, 2013 at 6:09 PM, Till Maas <opensource@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: >>> >>> On Mon, Apr 15, 2013 at 11:28:12PM -0400, Robert Moskowitz wrote: >>> >>>> which talks about F18-beta. So what do I have to do to build a F18 >>>> production image and is there anything else I need to do? >>>> >>>> Oh, the primary use of this system will be as a backup/archive server. >>> >>> AFAIK it will not be supported anymore starting with Fedora 19, >>> therefore you might consider setting up a different distribution. >> >> That's correct, F-18 will be the last supported armv5tel release. It >> will be supported for the entire mainline support cycle so until a >> month after the release of Fedora 20. > > > Facinating. > > Any writeups as to why Fedora is exiting what will be a major part of the > computing landscape in coming years? We're not exiting the ARM landscape, we're discontinuing support for older ARM chipsets based on the ARMv5 designs. We're doing this because there was only every very few devices that were workable with Fedora (256Mb+ RAM and some other bits) and ARM has discontinued the ARMv5 platforms because they've been replaced with equivalent cost/feature/power equivalents in the ARMv7 Cortex-Ax series of processors. They also are dependent on older HW like DDR1 RAM which is also getting more expensive. > What other options are there out there? ARMv7 hardware such as a BeagleBone, PandaBoard, a number of different Marvell devices based on the Armada chipset. There's also the upcoming aarch64 platforms. Peter _______________________________________________ arm mailing list arm@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx https://admin.fedoraproject.org/mailman/listinfo/arm