On Thu, Aug 06, 2020 at 03:26:34PM +0100, Michael Tremer (michael.tremer(a)ipfire.org) wrote: > As stated before, kernel support for 32 bits is bad. None of the > big commercial Linux distributions is releasing a 32 bit version any > more. RHEL, Ubuntu, CentOS, Arch do not exist for i686 AFAIK. CentOS actually still does: https://wiki.centos.org/SpecialInterestGroup/AltArch/i386 And Debian and Slackware do (although Debian now requires i686, but even I don't have any pre-PAE i586 things left). Of course they're not commercial distributions, but reasonably big and well-maintained nonetheless. > Hence we have to fix all the bugs on our own which we simply can’t do. In my experience Debian is pretty good at that. > We knew that this has been coming for a while now. See here: > > https://blog.ipfire.org/post/32-bit-is-dead-long-live-32-bit > > We are trying our best here, but if usage of that architecture > drops below 5% or so we can rather invest our time into something > else that benefits more users. I appreciate that. But if it's now at over 20%, it may take surprisingly long before it falls belos 5%. Anyway, I've already been planning to replace those ancient machines, but I can't see getting it done this year in any event. So I just ask, please don't rush it any more than you must. -- Tapani