On Mon, 08 Sep 2008 21:02:49 +0200, Ingo Molnar said: > ... and so on it goes with this argument. Everyone has a different > target audience and there's no firm limit. Maybe what makes more sense > is to have some sort of time dependency: > > support all x86 CPUs released in the last year > support all x86 CPUs released in the past 5 years > support all x86 CPUs released in the past 10 years > support all x86 CPUs released ever > [ ... or configure a specific model ] > > and people/distributions would use _those_ switches. That means we could > continuously tweak those targets, as systems become obsolete and new > CPUs arrive. That's just *asking* for flame mail if somebody builds a kernel for a system that's 4 year 9 months old, and he builds a kernel 6 months later, and it fails to boot because the CPU is now 3 months out and we've deprecated it... Quick - what year/month was the CPU you're using now released? No peeking. ;) (For the record, I have no *clue* when Intel actually released the Core2 T7200, which is a whole *nother* can of worms - the chip release date can be quite some time before the system vendor ships, and when the consumer actually buys it - it's quite possible that we can write "released in the past 5 years", a user looks at it and says "I bought this system 4 years 2 months ago", and think he's OK, but he's not because he bought a system released 4 years 9 months ago that used a chipset released 5 years 6 months ago...