Karsten Merker <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes: > On Sat, Nov 15, 2003 at 07:15:42PM +0100, Goswin von Brederlow wrote: > > > The problems with porting debian-installer to different archs is > > minimal. As shown on the D-I debcamp in Oldenburg porting to a new > > architecture can be done over a weekend without any prior knowledge of > > d-i. Since then several things have also been simplified in respect to > > porting and more people are able to help on the issue. > > > > Given a person with the hardware and time I'm certain support can be > > added in a single day. The big problem is getting access to the > > hardware directly or indirectly through a tester. > > Unfortunately it is not that simple. Work is underway for several > architectures, but this takes a lot longer than just a single day or > a weekend. Don't forget that besides platform-specific bugs in d-i > (like the crash when selecting another language than US-English on > mipsel) there are also platform-specific bugs which are probably not > a problem of d-i itself but show up only in d-i (the busybox-ash > problem on mipsel comes to my mind).
Ok, but those will only show up once a port is underway. I was talking about getting d-i build and make it create bootable images. Testing of the many subcomponents (all the udebs) takes a lot longer and a lot more testers. > Besides that there are architectures which cannot dynamically load > a ramdisk through the bootloader but instead must statically > compile the initrd into the kernel, which needs a kernel rebuild > for every new cycle, so turnaround times are quite long. Thats being worked on for ppc for some time now, which seems to be the worst case needing a complete kernel compile to add the initrd. Other archs can link a prebuild image and initrd or use the ppc method once thats setteled. > Making a "normal" change and testing it takes up to an hour for me; > if I need to do a full install to test the change (like the current > work on the bootloader stuff) takes even longer. > > Nonetheless I do not think that there should be an i386-only release > of d-i. One of Debian's strengths is the multi-platform support, > and we should try to keep d-i in sync on all platforms. One aim for my mail was to rouse some people to help for the other archs. MfG Goswin