[redirecting to -devel where this belongs] On Mon, Mar 13, 2006 at 12:11:59PM +0100, Martin Schulze wrote: > > > ---------------------------------------------------------------------- > > > Question to the release and archive people: Is there such a > > > requirement? Will such architectures indeed be included the archive? > > > Do we really need machines of the particular 64 bit architectures? If > > > so for which architectures exactly? > > > ----------------------------------------------------------------------
> > No decision has been made about including such partial architectures in the > > archive yet. I think it's the logical way to go once multiarch matures, but > > it hasn't really been discussed in-depth. The need for autobuilders capable > > of running binaries of these types exists whether or not we implement > > multiarch, though, because we already have sparc, powerpc, i386, and s390 > > library packages in the archive providing 64-bit variants for these > > architectures; having 32-bit autobuilders stumble over security builds of > > glibc would be a bad thing. > Glibc in woody can by autobuilt. > Glibc in sarge can by autobuilt. > Glibc in etch can most probably by autobuilt. For a while, it was *not* possible to autobuild glibc for etch on i386 and powerpc. As I said, I think that's been fixed now. > Which security updates are you talking about? The ones for etch. > > But this may have been largely mitigated in the meantime by some changes to > > dpkg-dev (dpkg-shlibdeps) that eliminate the dependency on ldd. If the > > existing lib packages can be autobuilt, I don't see any need to rush > > additional 64-bit autobuilders, since I think the current biarch approach to > > libraries is pretty lousy and shouldn't be expanded given that multiarch is > > on the horizon. > So the conclusion is that we currently don't need these machines. > Please correct me if I'm wrong. There is no release-critical need for them. I think it would be nice if the project had a 64-bit ppc porter machine, though, so that maintainers/NMUers of such 64-bit lib packages could test and debug when necessary. Cheers, -- Steve Langasek Give me a lever long enough and a Free OS Debian Developer to set it on, and I can move the world. [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://www.debian.org/
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