• Ard Biesheuvel's avatar
    arch: Remove Itanium (IA-64) architecture · cf8e8658
    Ard Biesheuvel authored
    The Itanium architecture is obsolete, and an informal survey [0] reveals
    that any residual use of Itanium hardware in production is mostly HP-UX
    or OpenVMS based. The use of Linux on Itanium appears to be limited to
    enthusiasts that occasionally boot a fresh Linux kernel to see whether
    things are still working as intended, and perhaps to churn out some
    distro packages that are rarely used in practice.
    
    None of the original companies behind Itanium still produce or support
    any hardware or software for the architecture, and it is listed as
    'Orphaned' in the MAINTAINERS file, as apparently, none of the engineers
    that contributed on behalf of those companies (nor anyone else, for that
    matter) have been willing to support or maintain the architecture
    upstream or even be responsible for applying the odd fix. The Intel
    firmware team removed all IA-64 support from the Tianocore/EDK2
    reference implementation of EFI in 2018. (Itanium is the original
    architecture for which EFI was developed, and the way Linux supports it
    deviates significantly from other architectures.) Some distros, such as
    Debian and Gentoo, still maintain [unofficial] ia64 ports, but many have
    dropped support years ago.
    
    While the argument is being made [1] that there is a 'for the common
    good' angle to being able to build and run existing projects such as the
    Grid Community Toolkit [2] on Itanium for interoperability testing, the
    fact remains that none of those projects are known to be deployed on
    Linux/ia64, and very few people actually have access to such a system in
    the first place. Even if there were ways imaginable in which Linux/ia64
    could be put to good use today, what matters is whether anyone is
    actually doing that, and this does not appear to be the case.
    
    There are no emulators widely available, and so boot testing Itanium is
    generally infeasible for ordinary contributors. GCC still supports IA-64
    but its compile farm [3] no longer has any IA-64 machines. GLIBC would
    like to get rid of IA-64 [4] too because it would permit some overdue
    code cleanups. In summary, the benefits to the ecosystem of having IA-64
    be part of it are mostly theoretical, whereas the maintenance overhead
    of keeping it supported is real.
    
    So let's rip off the band aid, and remove the IA-64 arch code entirely.
    This follows the timeline proposed by the Debian/ia64 maintainer [5],
    which removes support in a controlled manner, leaving IA-64 in a known
    good state in the most recent LTS release. Other projects will follow
    once the kernel support is removed.
    
    [0] https://lore.kernel.org/all/CAMj1kXFCMh_578jniKpUtx_j8ByHnt=s7S+yQ+vGbKt9ud7+kQ@mail.gmail.com/
    [1] https://lore.kernel.org/all/0075883c-7c51-00f5-2c2d-5119c1820410@web.de/
    [2] https://gridcf.org/gct-docs/latest/index.html
    [3] https://cfarm.tetaneutral.net/machines/list/
    [4] https://lore.kernel.org/all/87bkiilpc4.fsf@mid.deneb.enyo.de/
    [5] https://lore.kernel.org/all/ff58a3e76e5102c94bb5946d99187b358def688a.camel@physik.fu-berlin.de/Acked-by: default avatarTony Luck <tony.luck@intel.com>
    Signed-off-by: default avatarArd Biesheuvel <ardb@kernel.org>
    cf8e8658
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