+++ Mike Thompson [2012-03-07 09:32 -0800]:
> Wookey, thank you for the very detailed response.
> Debian is expecting Pi users, like all pre-v7 hardware
> owners, such as all the *plug devices, to use the armel port, in the
> same way that the 'offical' fedora distro is v5, softfp. If
+++ Steve Langasek [2012-03-07 14:28 -0800]:
> For all intents and purposes, this *is* a new port. This can't just be done
> as a set of optimized libraries on top of armhf, because the baseline for
> the armhf port is ARMv7 so none of these packages are guaranteed to run on
> RPi, *including ld.
On Wed, Mar 07, 2012 at 09:32:05AM -0800, Mike Thompson wrote:5~
> > The armhf ABI will work onthe RPi, but the packages
> > would need to be rebuilt to not use the extra v7 or VFP v3
> > instructions. That is a CPU optimisation, like rebuilding for i486
> > instead of i586, not a new ABI, and thus
At Wed, 7 Mar 2012 11:39:43 +, Wookey wrote:
> If there is enough enthusiasm
Pardon my 2 cents from the peanut gallery. Considering that the
Raspberry Pi is currently selling at a rate of 700 per second (and
it's been on sale for a full week now), I would call that a mentally
kook-tastic amo
On Wed, Mar 7, 2012 at 10:07 AM, Lennart Sorensen <
lsore...@csclub.uwaterloo.ca> wrote:
> You can certainly run armel, armhf and armWhateverYouNameIt in chroots
> on an i.MX53 (I have helped with armel issues while running armhf using
> chroots and it works fine since the armhf kernel can run eve
> BTW my gcc man page has an armv6t2 -march= target, so I suspect there
> are some ARMv6 CPUs with Thumb-2.
You still can't run ARMv7 Thumb-2 code an an ARMv6t2 core. The same way you
can't run ARMv7 ARM code on an ARMv6 core. THe only ARMv6t2 implementation I
know of is the arm1156 (which I
On Wed, Mar 07, 2012 at 06:28:44PM +0100, Loïc Minier wrote:
> *Debian*'s armhf is configured to use Thumb-2, but you could rebuild
> the packages with a toolchain defaulting to ARM mode and your binaries
> would be compatible with the Debian ones as long as both are built
> with interworking.
On Wed, Mar 07, 2012 at 09:32:05AM -0800, Mike Thompson wrote:
> I've been using the armel (and earlier ABI) on my NSLU2 (slug) for several
> years now. I actually never really understood much about the Debian port
> to ARM, other than it just worked well for me. My interest in the RPi has
> got
> With actual RPi hardware still being 6 to 8 weeks out, would a Freescale
> i.MX535 Quick Start board allow such benchmarking? I presume an armel
> install of Debian and compiling certain packages with VFP2 optimizations
> would be pretty straight forward. Is armhf in such a state that it would b
On Wed, Mar 07, 2012, Lennart Sorensen wrote:
> Hmm I thought armhf did ARMv6, but no, it uses thumb-2 which apparently
> means ARMv7.
*Debian*'s armhf is configured to use Thumb-2, but you could rebuild
the packages with a toolchain defaulting to ARM mode and your binaries
would be compatible
Wookey, thank you for the very detailed response.
On Wed, Mar 7, 2012 at 3:39 AM, Wookey wrote:
> As you presumably know we already have 2 arm parts. The armhf arm
> v7+VFP3 (using FP registers in calling convention and thumb2
> instructions) and the armel v4t (using softfp FP emulation and only
On Wed, Mar 7, 2012 at 3:13 AM, David Given wrote:
> Does Debian armhf still target ARMv7 and above? I can't find any
> definitive statement. I know that Ubuntu *does* target ARMv7+, which
> means that it won't work on the Pi (and Canonical have stated that they
> have no interest in supporting t
On Wed, Mar 07, 2012 at 04:25:52PM +0100, Oliver Grawert wrote:
>hi,
>On Wed, 7 Mar 2012 11:46:13 +
>Wookey wrote:
>
>> Ubuntu:
>> * “armel” (v7, Thumb 2, EABI soft-float)
>> still going, will ship in Precise (12.04), maybe with LTS?
>> * “armhf” (v7, Thumb 2, EABI hard-float)
>>
hi,
On Wed, 7 Mar 2012 11:46:13 +
Wookey wrote:
> Ubuntu:
> * “armel” (v7, Thumb 2, EABI soft-float)
> still going, will ship in Precise (12.04), maybe with LTS?
> * “armhf” (v7, Thumb 2, EABI hard-float)
> mostly there, minor issues remaining
> will ship in Precise unless
On Tue, Mar 06, 2012 at 06:22:38PM -0800, Mike Thompson wrote:
> I am potentially interested in creating/maintaining a Debian port that
> would mirror the work being done in armhf, but with the port tuned to the
> specifics of the Raspberry Pi hardware which I believe is ARMv6+VFPv2. The
> goal wo
+++ Mike Thompson [2012-03-06 18:22 -0800]:
> I am potentially interested in creating/maintaining a Debian port that would
> mirror the work being done in armhf, but with the port tuned to the specifics
> of the Raspberry Pi hardware which I believe is ARMv6+VFPv2. The goal would
> be
> a Debian
+++ David Given [2012-03-07 11:13 +]:
> Mike Thompson wrote:
> > I am potentially interested in creating/maintaining a Debian port that
> > would mirror the work being done in armhf, but with the port tuned to
> > the specifics of the Raspberry Pi hardware which I believe is
> > ARMv6+VFPv2.
>
Mike Thompson wrote:
> I am potentially interested in creating/maintaining a Debian port that
> would mirror the work being done in armhf, but with the port tuned to
> the specifics of the Raspberry Pi hardware which I believe is
> ARMv6+VFPv2.
Does Debian armhf still target ARMv7 and above? I ca
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