On Thu, 2 Nov 2023 at 00:24, Frank Scheiner <frank.scheiner@xxxxxx> wrote: > > so the ia64 removal happened despite the efforts - not only from us - to > keep it alive in Linux. That is a - sad - fact now. Well, I'd have personally been willing to resurrect it, but I was told several times that other projects were basically just waiting for the kernel support to die. Has the itanium situation really changed? The thing is, nobody doing new kernel code wants to deal with itanium, so relegating it to the same situation that i386 support was ("it still works in old kernels") doesn't seem to be a huge issue for the people who actually want to use those machines. That said, I'd be willing to resurrect itanium support, even though I personally despise the architecture with a passion for being fundamentally based on faulty design premises, and an implementation based on politics rather than good technical design. But only if it turns out to actually have some long-term active interest (ie I'd compare it to the situation with m68k etc - clearly dead architectures that we still support despite them being not relevant - because some people care and they don't cause pain). So I'd be willing to come back to the "can we resurrect it" discussion, but not immediately - more along the lines of a "look, we've been maintaining it out of tree for a year, the other infrastructure is still alive, there is no impact on the rest of the kernel, can we please try again"? Linus