For FPU heavy operations - maybe. For pointer chasing like most server tasks - no.
Soft-float can still use the hardware FPU.
On 6 Mar 2017 07:33, "Nicolas" nicolas@shivaserv.fr wrote:
Yes, I know what means h, but if redsleeve provides image for pi2, it will be less fast than C7?
Nicolas
6 mars 2017 08:24 "Gordan Bobic" <gordan@redsleeve.org <%22Gordan%20Bobic%22%20%3Cgordan@redsleeve.org%3E>> a écrit:
Ressleeve is soft-float, for ARMv5 (armv5tel) and later CPUs. CentOS 7 is hard-float, for ARMv7 and later CPUs (armv7hl). The missing "h" is for hard-float. On 6 Mar 2017 07:18, "Nicolas" nicolas@shivaserv.fr wrote:
Hi Jacco,
I'm trying the redsleeve image on Pi2, and then I will try on Pi0.
Why the pi2 image is armv7l in place of armv7hl ?
Nicolas
3 mars 2017 13:11 "Jacco Ligthart" <jacco@redsleeve.org <%22Jacco%20Ligthart%22%20%3Cjacco@redsleeve.org%3E>> a écrit:
On 03/03/17 11:31, Nicolas wrote:
Hi team,
Is there any working image for Pi Zero on C7 ? :)
I'm pretty sure the one from Pi2 can work but I've not tested it yet.
You could try a redsleeve image: http://www.mirrorservice.org/sites/ftp.redsleeve.org/pub/el7 -devel/el7/rootfs/raspi-redsleeve7.3-cli-0.6.img.xz
I don't (yet) own a zero, so this is untested. But if the CPU and boot process is similar to a raspberry model 1, it should boot. user=root pass=password1234
Let me know if this worked :)
Jacco
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