Hello,
just for interest - I don't have such a CPU and I don't plan to buy one.
Is there a current Linux distribution that supports the old PowerPC >architecture (not ppc64)?
Marco Moock <[email protected]> writes:
Hello,
just for interest - I don't have such a CPU and I don't plan to buy one.
Is there a current Linux distribution that supports the old PowerPC >>architecture (not ppc64)?
You mean 32-bit PowerPC (powerpc), not 64-bit PowerPC (ppc64), and not >little-endian 64-bit PowerPC (ppc64el), right.
It's always goot to look at Debian for such things. ><https://www.debian.org/ports/powerpc/> says:
You mean 32-bit PowerPC (powerpc), not 64-bit PowerPC (ppc64), and not little-endian 64-bit PowerPC (ppc64el), right.
It's always goot to look at Debian for such things. <https://www.debian.org/ports/powerpc/> says:
|The last supported release for 32-bit PowerPC is Debian 8 ("jessie").
Interestingly this page does not mention (big-endian) ppc64 at all,
but there used to be a ppc64 port and there still seems to be ongoing
work on ppc64 <https://wiki.debian.org/PPC64>. Debian apparently also
still performs buildd-testing for ppc for Debian unstable: <https://buildd.debian.org/status/architecture.php?a=powerpc&suite=sid>
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