Which versions of Ubuntu support ARM?












2















The official website made this unclear. I have been having problems with running executable files on the BPI image of Mate so I'd like to just use an official version so that I don't encounter problems like this. Are there any versions that work on these processors? (I use a 32-bit A7 processor)










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  • 1





    I'm talking about the different versions, not servers. (mate , lubuntu, etc)

    – Anoraki
    Aug 29 '17 at 12:01






  • 1





    All downloads that have "arm" in it And the server is the base of ALL versions ;-) Like ports.ubuntu.com/ubuntu-ports/dists/zesty/main/installer-arm64/… does. Btw you need 64-bit I would assume. Doubt we have a 32-bit

    – Rinzwind
    Aug 29 '17 at 12:01


















2















The official website made this unclear. I have been having problems with running executable files on the BPI image of Mate so I'd like to just use an official version so that I don't encounter problems like this. Are there any versions that work on these processors? (I use a 32-bit A7 processor)










share|improve this question


















  • 1





    I'm talking about the different versions, not servers. (mate , lubuntu, etc)

    – Anoraki
    Aug 29 '17 at 12:01






  • 1





    All downloads that have "arm" in it And the server is the base of ALL versions ;-) Like ports.ubuntu.com/ubuntu-ports/dists/zesty/main/installer-arm64/… does. Btw you need 64-bit I would assume. Doubt we have a 32-bit

    – Rinzwind
    Aug 29 '17 at 12:01
















2












2








2








The official website made this unclear. I have been having problems with running executable files on the BPI image of Mate so I'd like to just use an official version so that I don't encounter problems like this. Are there any versions that work on these processors? (I use a 32-bit A7 processor)










share|improve this question














The official website made this unclear. I have been having problems with running executable files on the BPI image of Mate so I'd like to just use an official version so that I don't encounter problems like this. Are there any versions that work on these processors? (I use a 32-bit A7 processor)







arm






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asked Aug 29 '17 at 11:50









AnorakiAnoraki

154




154








  • 1





    I'm talking about the different versions, not servers. (mate , lubuntu, etc)

    – Anoraki
    Aug 29 '17 at 12:01






  • 1





    All downloads that have "arm" in it And the server is the base of ALL versions ;-) Like ports.ubuntu.com/ubuntu-ports/dists/zesty/main/installer-arm64/… does. Btw you need 64-bit I would assume. Doubt we have a 32-bit

    – Rinzwind
    Aug 29 '17 at 12:01
















  • 1





    I'm talking about the different versions, not servers. (mate , lubuntu, etc)

    – Anoraki
    Aug 29 '17 at 12:01






  • 1





    All downloads that have "arm" in it And the server is the base of ALL versions ;-) Like ports.ubuntu.com/ubuntu-ports/dists/zesty/main/installer-arm64/… does. Btw you need 64-bit I would assume. Doubt we have a 32-bit

    – Rinzwind
    Aug 29 '17 at 12:01










1




1





I'm talking about the different versions, not servers. (mate , lubuntu, etc)

– Anoraki
Aug 29 '17 at 12:01





I'm talking about the different versions, not servers. (mate , lubuntu, etc)

– Anoraki
Aug 29 '17 at 12:01




1




1





All downloads that have "arm" in it And the server is the base of ALL versions ;-) Like ports.ubuntu.com/ubuntu-ports/dists/zesty/main/installer-arm64/… does. Btw you need 64-bit I would assume. Doubt we have a 32-bit

– Rinzwind
Aug 29 '17 at 12:01







All downloads that have "arm" in it And the server is the base of ALL versions ;-) Like ports.ubuntu.com/ubuntu-ports/dists/zesty/main/installer-arm64/… does. Btw you need 64-bit I would assume. Doubt we have a 32-bit

– Rinzwind
Aug 29 '17 at 12:01












2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes


















0














These versions of Ubuntu support ARM.



https://www.ubuntu.com/download/server/arm  
https://www.ubuntu.com/download/alternative-downloads
https://wiki.ubuntu.com/ARM/RaspberryPi
https://wiki.ubuntu.com/ARM/developer.ubuntu.com/core/get-started





share|improve this answer





















  • 1





    Most ARM versions of Ubuntu seem to be 64-bit only. Sadly, I have 32-bit as my single-board computer only have 2GB of RAM and doesn't really need 64-bit. Because of this and other problems I'm facing with the OS, I'm switching over to Open SUSE as it's more fitting for how I use computers and support my board specifically. Thanks for the help!

    – Anoraki
    Aug 30 '17 at 1:28



















1














32-bit ARM support appears to have been or is being discontinued. All I can find currently are pre-installed server images for the Raspberry Pi, available here. As time goes by 32-bit options are disappearing. I recommend seeking out 64-bit alternatives. This old Q&A reflects some of the history of this. Phoronix reported back in May of 2018 that armhf was proposed to be on the chopping block. If you are still running on 32-bit hardware you will find your options more and more limited as time goes by. There was a great deal of discussion topic on the developers mailing list under the topic Proposal: Let's drop i386. Desktop images such as you mention have already been dropped from development for 32-bit.






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    2 Answers
    2






    active

    oldest

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    2 Answers
    2






    active

    oldest

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    active

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    active

    oldest

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    0














    These versions of Ubuntu support ARM.



    https://www.ubuntu.com/download/server/arm  
    https://www.ubuntu.com/download/alternative-downloads
    https://wiki.ubuntu.com/ARM/RaspberryPi
    https://wiki.ubuntu.com/ARM/developer.ubuntu.com/core/get-started





    share|improve this answer





















    • 1





      Most ARM versions of Ubuntu seem to be 64-bit only. Sadly, I have 32-bit as my single-board computer only have 2GB of RAM and doesn't really need 64-bit. Because of this and other problems I'm facing with the OS, I'm switching over to Open SUSE as it's more fitting for how I use computers and support my board specifically. Thanks for the help!

      – Anoraki
      Aug 30 '17 at 1:28
















    0














    These versions of Ubuntu support ARM.



    https://www.ubuntu.com/download/server/arm  
    https://www.ubuntu.com/download/alternative-downloads
    https://wiki.ubuntu.com/ARM/RaspberryPi
    https://wiki.ubuntu.com/ARM/developer.ubuntu.com/core/get-started





    share|improve this answer





















    • 1





      Most ARM versions of Ubuntu seem to be 64-bit only. Sadly, I have 32-bit as my single-board computer only have 2GB of RAM and doesn't really need 64-bit. Because of this and other problems I'm facing with the OS, I'm switching over to Open SUSE as it's more fitting for how I use computers and support my board specifically. Thanks for the help!

      – Anoraki
      Aug 30 '17 at 1:28














    0












    0








    0







    These versions of Ubuntu support ARM.



    https://www.ubuntu.com/download/server/arm  
    https://www.ubuntu.com/download/alternative-downloads
    https://wiki.ubuntu.com/ARM/RaspberryPi
    https://wiki.ubuntu.com/ARM/developer.ubuntu.com/core/get-started





    share|improve this answer















    These versions of Ubuntu support ARM.



    https://www.ubuntu.com/download/server/arm  
    https://www.ubuntu.com/download/alternative-downloads
    https://wiki.ubuntu.com/ARM/RaspberryPi
    https://wiki.ubuntu.com/ARM/developer.ubuntu.com/core/get-started






    share|improve this answer














    share|improve this answer



    share|improve this answer








    edited Aug 29 '17 at 13:05









    karel

    60.1k13130154




    60.1k13130154










    answered Aug 29 '17 at 12:26









    feezyfeezy

    16




    16








    • 1





      Most ARM versions of Ubuntu seem to be 64-bit only. Sadly, I have 32-bit as my single-board computer only have 2GB of RAM and doesn't really need 64-bit. Because of this and other problems I'm facing with the OS, I'm switching over to Open SUSE as it's more fitting for how I use computers and support my board specifically. Thanks for the help!

      – Anoraki
      Aug 30 '17 at 1:28














    • 1





      Most ARM versions of Ubuntu seem to be 64-bit only. Sadly, I have 32-bit as my single-board computer only have 2GB of RAM and doesn't really need 64-bit. Because of this and other problems I'm facing with the OS, I'm switching over to Open SUSE as it's more fitting for how I use computers and support my board specifically. Thanks for the help!

      – Anoraki
      Aug 30 '17 at 1:28








    1




    1





    Most ARM versions of Ubuntu seem to be 64-bit only. Sadly, I have 32-bit as my single-board computer only have 2GB of RAM and doesn't really need 64-bit. Because of this and other problems I'm facing with the OS, I'm switching over to Open SUSE as it's more fitting for how I use computers and support my board specifically. Thanks for the help!

    – Anoraki
    Aug 30 '17 at 1:28





    Most ARM versions of Ubuntu seem to be 64-bit only. Sadly, I have 32-bit as my single-board computer only have 2GB of RAM and doesn't really need 64-bit. Because of this and other problems I'm facing with the OS, I'm switching over to Open SUSE as it's more fitting for how I use computers and support my board specifically. Thanks for the help!

    – Anoraki
    Aug 30 '17 at 1:28













    1














    32-bit ARM support appears to have been or is being discontinued. All I can find currently are pre-installed server images for the Raspberry Pi, available here. As time goes by 32-bit options are disappearing. I recommend seeking out 64-bit alternatives. This old Q&A reflects some of the history of this. Phoronix reported back in May of 2018 that armhf was proposed to be on the chopping block. If you are still running on 32-bit hardware you will find your options more and more limited as time goes by. There was a great deal of discussion topic on the developers mailing list under the topic Proposal: Let's drop i386. Desktop images such as you mention have already been dropped from development for 32-bit.






    share|improve this answer




























      1














      32-bit ARM support appears to have been or is being discontinued. All I can find currently are pre-installed server images for the Raspberry Pi, available here. As time goes by 32-bit options are disappearing. I recommend seeking out 64-bit alternatives. This old Q&A reflects some of the history of this. Phoronix reported back in May of 2018 that armhf was proposed to be on the chopping block. If you are still running on 32-bit hardware you will find your options more and more limited as time goes by. There was a great deal of discussion topic on the developers mailing list under the topic Proposal: Let's drop i386. Desktop images such as you mention have already been dropped from development for 32-bit.






      share|improve this answer


























        1












        1








        1







        32-bit ARM support appears to have been or is being discontinued. All I can find currently are pre-installed server images for the Raspberry Pi, available here. As time goes by 32-bit options are disappearing. I recommend seeking out 64-bit alternatives. This old Q&A reflects some of the history of this. Phoronix reported back in May of 2018 that armhf was proposed to be on the chopping block. If you are still running on 32-bit hardware you will find your options more and more limited as time goes by. There was a great deal of discussion topic on the developers mailing list under the topic Proposal: Let's drop i386. Desktop images such as you mention have already been dropped from development for 32-bit.






        share|improve this answer













        32-bit ARM support appears to have been or is being discontinued. All I can find currently are pre-installed server images for the Raspberry Pi, available here. As time goes by 32-bit options are disappearing. I recommend seeking out 64-bit alternatives. This old Q&A reflects some of the history of this. Phoronix reported back in May of 2018 that armhf was proposed to be on the chopping block. If you are still running on 32-bit hardware you will find your options more and more limited as time goes by. There was a great deal of discussion topic on the developers mailing list under the topic Proposal: Let's drop i386. Desktop images such as you mention have already been dropped from development for 32-bit.







        share|improve this answer












        share|improve this answer



        share|improve this answer










        answered Jan 24 at 15:53









        Elder GeekElder Geek

        27.3k954127




        27.3k954127






























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