On Thu, Dec 16, 2021 at 6:33 PM Giulio Benetti <giulio.benetti@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > On 16/12/21 09:26, Arnd Bergmann wrote: > > On Wed, Dec 15, 2021 at 11:05 PM Jesse Taube <mr.bossman075@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > As a more general comment, it's always nice to see newly added SoC > > platforms, especially when they are this well implemented and done > > by hobbyists. However, I do think you are being overly optimistic > > as to how useful this is going to be to other people: interest in NOMMU > > ARM platforms has dropped a lot over the past 5 years, and as far as I > > can tell, it is only being kept alive for existing stm32 customers > > as the economics do not favor Linux on Cortex-M for new products > > compare to Linux on Cortex-A or some RTOS on Cortex-M. > > > > The existing users will inevitably stop updating their kernels at some > > point, and then it's most likely just you and Vladimir Murzin that care. > > > About this will you accept support for the other SoCs in the family? > We would like to add in the near future: > - i.MXRT1020(uboot support is already upstreamed) > - i.MXRT1024(almost equal to 1020) > - i.MXRT1060(almost equal to 1050) > - i.MXRT1064(almost equal to 1060) > And > - i.MXRT1160/70 new family with faster core clock(1Ghz) and a cortex M4 > > We need to add missing lcd(uboot upstreamed), usb(uboot upstreamed), > ethernet(wip) supports for i.MXRT10xx family. Sure, anything you want to work on supporting can be added to the kernel, the important bit is that it's well written and can be maintained going forward. My best guess is that we'll end up ripping out all NOMMU support in a few years, when we get to a point when both of these things happen: - the number of actual users that still update their kernels becomes really low - There is some treewide refactoring that isn't easily supportable without an MMU unless someone puts extra work into it. At the moment, we still support NOMMU kernels on a bunch of architectures (Arm, riscv/k210, sh/j2, m68k/coldfire, xtensa and h8300). Out of these, Arm is by far the most active, and if Arm NOMMU support was to go away for some reason, the others would likely follow. > This is to organize with Jesse also about buying evaluation boards and > timing. > > We’ve meant this porting also as an exercise to deal with Linux deeper > for us and for the other newbies. > > We’ve been also asked about a possible support for s32s(quad cortex-R52) > on initial emails but it has no mmu too. > While I’m seeing that some cortex-R is landing inside Linux. > Would it be interesting anyway? I brought that up during the initial review, but I think this is even less interesting than Cortex-M support from the perspective of potential use cases. While Cortex-M MCUs have some advantages over larger SoCs in terms of power consumption and cost, this is generally not true for running Linux on Cortex-R. The Cortex-R and Cortex-A cores are closely related, so they tend have similar power/performance/area characteristics, but the lack of an MMU makes the Cortex-R much less useful. If there was an advantage to running with the MMU disabled, you could actually do that on a Cortex-A as well, but clearly nobody does that either. Vladimir has put some work into making Cortex-R work in the kernel, and he may have some other thoughts on this question. Arnd