Hello! On 12/26/20 9:39 AM, Thomas Huth wrote: > the problem is not that the target CPU is old, but rather that according to > the (former?) maintainer, there are no users left: > > https://www.mail-archive.com/qemu-devel@nongnu.org/msg605024.html > > So it got marked as deprecated in this commit here: > > https://git.qemu.org/?p=qemu.git;a=commitdiff;h=d84980051229fa43c96b3 > > Without maintainer and without users, there is no point in keeping this > target, is there?
I'm not sure how you determine whether there are people using the code or not. There is no really user tracking in QEMU, is there? And the maintainer's claim that RISC-V takes over makes no sense either. The point of emulators is to be able to run old and existing software. If a target had only a justification to exist while it's commercially viable, you would have to remove 90% of the targets in QEMU. I mean, the whole point of an emulator is being able to run existing code on modern hardware, usually because the old hardware is no longer available. And as long as the target is functional, I don't see a point in taking away the functionality. Adrian -- .''`. John Paul Adrian Glaubitz : :' : Debian Developer - glaub...@debian.org `. `' Freie Universitaet Berlin - glaub...@physik.fu-berlin.de `- GPG: 62FF 8A75 84E0 2956 9546 0006 7426 3B37 F5B5 F913