>>> Ping. >>> >>> I was hoping to get this merged in 1.1.20, which didn't happen despite >>> it getting delayed for a long time. Is there a chance of it happening >>> soon for 1.1.21? >> >> Yes. I can bump the priority for this. >> >> There hopefully should not be that much more to do on the port to >> get it in shape for upstream. Sorry there have been a lot of things >> going on so this has fallen through the cracks. >> >> There is still the ELF TLS bug, which shouldn’t be hard to fix, but >> we could always mark the port experimental. If it’s in tree; then >> more folk may be interested in fixing bugs. The code also needs some >> review. > > I don't want to merge something with known bugs like this, but I'm > happy to participate in fixing it if I know what the issue is and have > a candidate submission that supposedly works modulo the bug to be > fixed. My understanding is that gcc and qemu stuff is upstream now so > it should be simple to me to build and test. Is this correct? Okay. We’ll fix the bugs. Yes, there are now several ways to get RISC-V Linux booting in QEMU. There are riscv cross tools and riscv qemu binaries in Debian Sid. I think it is possible to debootstrap riscv64. Indeed the Debian RISC-V builders are running QEMU. I also have a bootstrap script for a musl riscv gcc 8.1 compiler here: https://github.com/michaeljclark/musl-riscv-toolchain You can build the gcc toolchain for comparison: https://github.com/riscv/riscv-gnu-toolchain There are links to several Linux images (Fedora, Debian) and build instructions for Linux kernel and bbl on the RISC-V QEMU wiki: - https://github.com/riscv/riscv-qemu/wiki Alternatively you can clone SiFive’s freedom-u-sdk and type “make qemu” to get a riscv64 buildroot image booting up in QEMU. This same root image and kernel runs on the HiFive Unleashed Board: https://github.com/sifive/freedom-u-sdk Also, Fabrice Belliard has a buildroot port that has recipes for both riscv32 and riscv64: https://bellard.org/tinyemu/ Normally the kernel is packaged as a payload inside of “bbl”, the Berkeley Boot Loader. However, we now support separate kernel and firmware using the latest bbl, the RISC-V QEMU and “virt” machine in QEMU from the riscv-qemu repository (this feature is not upstream yet) and linux 4.19-rc5 kernel. This is mostly useful if you are recompiling the kernel. We have the -bios, -kernel, -initrd and -append options working: https://github.com/riscv/riscv-qemu e.g. $ qemu-system-riscv64 -nographic -machine virt -bios bbl -kernel vmlinux -initrd initramfs.gz -append rdinit=/bin/busybox The wiki link above and the freedom-u-sdk have docs and Makefile recipes for attaching VirtIO drives and networking devices. >> We moved the port to riscv-musl in the RISC-V GitHub organisation >> [1]. We need to rebase and squash the tree and write a commit >> message containing the contributors list. >> >> The RISC-V rv32 port isn’t in glibc yet and it may be subject to >> change. I need to get a riscv32 Linux kernel running in QEMU so we >> can do testing against glibc... I’ll have to chat to Palmer about >> riscv32, see if there are any ABI issues we need to be aware of. We >> can spend some time this week... > > Great! No worries. It’ll be nice to get the port upstream... Cheers, Michael