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Date:      Wed, 11 Nov 2015 13:28:23 +0100
From:      Jan Bramkamp <crest@rlwinm.de>
To:        freebsd-arch@freebsd.org
Subject:   Re: Sparc64 doesn't care about you, and you shouldn't care about Sparc64
Message-ID:  <56433467.1040000@rlwinm.de>
In-Reply-To: <20151111084432.GC67251@server.rulingia.com>
References:  <563A5893.1030607@freebsd.org> <2AAC0EF3-528B-476F-BA9C-CDC3004465D0@bsdimp.com> <20151108155501.GA1901@alchemy.franken.de> <563F8385.3090603@freebsd.org> <56417100.5050600@Wilcox-Tech.com> <CANCZdfqO-SdjnonGzRr2H0pDon5oALsDGsmG3KOxPGRVdTbHPQ@mail.gmail.com> <39947478-4710-47D8-BAB1-FC93979570B6@mail.turbofuzz.com> <20151111084432.GC67251@server.rulingia.com>

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On 11/11/15 09:44, Peter Jeremy wrote:
> On 2015-Nov-10 22:55:38 -0800, Jordan Hubbard <jkh@mail.turbofuzz.com> wrote:
>> Again, what’s the long-term goal of supporting this architecture?
>
> The things that sparc64 give us that x86 doesn't are big-endian and
> strict alignment.  In theory, MIPS, PPC and ARM can give us both of
> those but I'm non sure whether we actually have any big-endian
> variants of them.
>

These days the cheapest new MIPS64 system you can get is a Ubiquiti 
EdgeRouter Lite with dual-core 500MHz Cavium Octeon 1+. I don't know if 
they support little-endian but the FreeBSD port to them uses big-endian. 
Since the u-boot bootloader isn't locked down you can just modify the 
startup script and boot from either TFTP or local USB storage.



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