On Tue, Sep 7, 2021 at 12:48 PM Daniel Palmer <daniel@xxxxxxxx> wrote: > On Tue, 7 Sept 2021 at 19:30, Bert Vermeulen <bert@xxxxxxxx> wrote: > > > > From: John Crispin <john@xxxxxxxxxxx> > > > > EN7523 is an armv7 based silicon used inside broadband access type devices > > such as xPON and xDSL. It shares various silicon blocks with MediaTek > > silicon such as the MT7622. > > This is a Cortex A53 isn't it? So it's ARMv8. I thought the issue is > that it's actually a 64bit system but you only have a 32bit > bootloader, firmware etc? > > Off-topic but related: Another MediaTek spin off, SigmaStar, seems to > have done exactly the same thing. Cortex A53 chip running as a 32bit > system to avoid having to fix their software. I'm interested to see if > this makes it into arm or arm64. :) Maybe it's best to just add them to both at the same time? The boot loader situation might take a bit to work out, but in theory this should be fixable. You can generally include .dtsi files from one in the other, as you can see from e.g. arch/arm64/boot/dts/broadcom/bcm2837-rpi-3-b.dts. For new files, I think I would prefer having the .dts files in arm64 and including them from arch/arm/ rather than the other way round, but others may come up with a good reason to keep doing the reverse. This would help encourage the thought that running a 64-bit kernel is the better setup, rather than propagate the 32-bit kernel nonsense on 64-bit machines. Arnd