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Considering that:

  1. Raspberry Pi 4 maximum RAM is 4Gb and so its memory is completely addressable by a 32bit OS

  2. all the code available for Raspberry is a 32bit code

are there any meaningful and reasonable advantages to run a 64bit OS?

This a background question behind all the recurring searches for a 64Bit OS per Raspberry Pi 4 and even for Raspberry Pi 3.

Update

If there aren't any reasonable advantages to run a 64bit OS on a Raspberry Pi 4 due to its limits in RAM size why compile, offer and search for a 64bit OS? Would it be even worse than run a 32bit OS?

blockmined
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  • The default Raspbian Buster for Pi4B is still 32-bit. There's nothing that will force you to go to a 64-bit OS. – Dougie Dec 02 '19 at 17:13
  • [This topic](https://www.raspberrypi.org/forums/viewtopic.php?t=247959) has lots of useful information on the subject. – Botspot Dec 02 '19 at 17:28
  • For memory mapping the sea of additional virtual addresses is extremely helpful. – crasic Dec 02 '19 at 19:26
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    Although the duplicate is not specifically about the Pi 4 and predates it, the answer here is the same regardless of model. Then "Why compile, offer and search for a 64bit OS?" is too much of a subjective and opinion based question, by which I mean different people may have different reasons, all of them equally valid. That's fine for a discussion style forum, but this is not. If you have a concrete context (eg., "I use my Pi for _____, would I benefit from a 64-bit OS?"), then that's a specific question with a reasonably objective singular answer. – goldilocks Dec 02 '19 at 22:44
  • My idea was to objectively and technically know whether it is better to use a 32bit instead of a 64bit OS on Raspberry Pi 4 but never mind. – blockmined Dec 03 '19 at 08:59

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