On Fri, Dec 13, 2024, at 04:51, A. Wilcox wrote: > On Dec 12, 2024, at 6:55 AM, Arnd Bergmann <arnd@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: >> From: Arnd Bergmann <arnd@xxxxxxxx> >> >> I submitted a patch to remove KVM support for x86-32 hosts earlier >> this month, but there were still concerns that this might be useful for >> testing 32-bit host in general, as that remains supported on three other >> architectures. I have gone through those three now and prepared similar >> patches, as all of them seem to be equally obsolete. >> >> Support for 32-bit KVM host on Arm hardware was dropped back in 2020 >> because of lack of users, despite Cortex-A7/A15/A17 based SoCs being >> much more widely deployed than the other virtualization capable 32-bit >> CPUs (Intel Core Duo/Silverthorne, PowerPC e300/e500/e600, MIPS P5600) >> combined. > > > I do use 32-bit KVM on a Core Duo “Yonah” and a Power Mac G4 (MDD), for > purposes of bisecting kernel issues without having to reboot the host > machine (when it can be duplicated in a KVM environment). > > I suppose it would still be possible to run the hosts on 6.12 LTS for > some time with newer guests, but it would be unfortunate. Would it be an option for you to just test those kernels on 64-bit machines? I assume you prefer to do native builds on 32-bit hardware because that fits your workflow, but once you get into debugging in a virtual machine, the results should generally be the same when building and running on a 64-bit host for both x86-32 and ppc32-classic, right? Arnd