this post was submitted on 20 Aug 2023
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I've seen people talking about it and experienced it myself with a server, but why does Linux run so well on ARM (especially compared to Windows)?

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[–] nyan@lemmy.cafe 46 points 1 year ago (8 children)

Linux, and much of the open-source software that goes with it, has been multi-architecture for a long time. If you take something that already runs pretty decently on x86, x86_64, PA-RISC, Motorola 68000, PowerPC, MIPS, SPARC, and Intel Itanium CPUs, porting it to yet another architecture is, while not trivial, at least mostly a known problem.

Windows, by contrast, was built for descendants of the Intel 8088, period. It's unsurprising that porting it is a hard problem and that results aren't always satisfactory.

(Apple built on top of a modified BSD kernel, and BSD has also been ported around quite a bit, so they also have a ports-are-a-known-problem advantage.)

[–] Bene7rddso@feddit.de 2 points 1 year ago (1 children)

Most of these architectures had a Windows port

[–] bhamlin@lemmy.world 3 points 1 year ago

Yes, and DEC Alpha too. But all of that ceased with windows 2000. The only porting since then was from x86 32bit to 64bit. I'm willing to bet money I don't have that Microsoft really only expected a port to 128bit x86 until ARM started gaining steam.

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