Re: [PATCH 00/18] Make common x86 arch area for i386 and x86_64 -Take 2
From: Linus Torvalds
Date: Wed Mar 14 2007 - 14:29:47 EST
On Wed, 14 Mar 2007, Ingo Molnar wrote:
>
> then i decided to analyze the patches: currently they move 13452 lines
> of code. i386 is 87847 lines of code, x86_64 is 40978 lines of code, a
> total of 128825. That means we move about 10% of the code. Not
> insignificant but not earth-shattering either. With alot more effort
> (and testing) we could realistically go up to maybe 20% - but that's
> still a bit low to spread out all the files, isnt it?
Well, I'd like it to be 100% _eventually_, and just unify the
architectures.
We've now done that both for S/390 and POWER, and I think in both cases
it's been a clear win. So it's not like this is even a radical idea.
The POWER architecture merge was actually done exactly the incremental
way, one file or directory at a time, and seemed to work out fine.
So while I'd like 100%, I'd be happy to even just get started with the
really obvious stuff. And the stuff that we *already* share certainly fall
under that "really obvious" label.
> So i thought it's a better idea to continue with the current more
> finegrained scheme of sharing some files between the architectures by
> having arch/x86_64 be the 'main' repository, with i386 inheriting them
> back, instead of spreading out the files?
That's really illogical, because historially, i386 was the main one, so
you'd have to either:
- have a really strange mix
OR
- move files around just to share them.
So I'd much rather have just a totally new architecture, and hope that we
can migrate more and more to it. Whether we ever get to the POWER
situation where only some really odd-ball special cases are still using
ppc or not, who knows? It might be, for example, that only the odder i386
cases (ie the "non-PC" subarchitectures - Voyager, Summit, NUMAQ and the
like) would stay in i386.
There really is almost nothing in i386 that shouldn't be supported on
x86-64 too, unless it literally is the actual low-level asm files and vm86
mode support (which in turn is best left as just a config option that
would just *depend* on 32-bit, so even that could sanely be represented
in a shared tree without any real downside at all).
Linus
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