On 10/7/18 1:05 AM, Tobias Klausmann wrote: >> >> Alpha is a historic architecture at this point -- the last Alpha chip was the >> EV7z which was released 14 years ago. I am wondering to what extent anyone >> cares enough to worry about support for new glibc on old Alpha kernels at this ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ >> point; I kind of suspect the number of Alpha Linux users can be counted on two >> hand's fingers. > > I'm the arch team lead for Alpha on Gentoo (team lead is sounding > more grandiose than it is, my team is me and Matt Turner). Gentoo > Linux is the last major distribution that still offers current > alpha support, after Debian stopping to do so a few years back. > > It's hard to say how many alpha users there still are, but we > still get bug reports and while #gentoo-alpha on Freenode is not > a particularly busy place, we still get walk-in users with > questions, usually about the the boot process and installing. > > Seeing as glibc is a central piece to Linux userspace, it ending > support would probably mean that within a year or so, we (Gentoo > Linux) stop supporting it for stable stuff, and thus security > updates. Since that state would be unlikely to change in the > future, we would probably make one last set of release > files/media and then close up shop. > > How much bother is it to keep maintaining alpha as a supported > target for glibc? Ultimately, it's a question if people want to > put in the time. There will always be users as long as there is > a supporting Linux distro, I guess. > The question is about if there is a reason to support a kernel/glibc version mismatch. -hpa