On Tue, Mar 15, 2005 at 11:47:37AM +0000, Colin Watson wrote: > On Mon, Mar 14, 2005 at 05:38:30PM +0100, Sven Luther wrote: > > I have proposed tier-1 ports for the main arches, tier-2 ports for the other > > ready ports but dropped from official support, and tier-3 ports for > > in-development ports. > > My problem with that is that I think we (and more importantly, our > users) would always have to look up what these numbers meant. Using > words instead of numbers would be preferable. Furthermore your tiers
Well, the user don't care, they point their apt sources at : ftp.<arch>.debian.org and everything works well for them, given the warning about possibly delays in security updates (altough the nonexistence of security.<arch>.debian.org should hint them to that anyway). > don't match the Vancouver proposal, in which there would be I don't care about the Vancounver proposal all that much, since its basic premise are the dropping of the minority arches, that is no stable release, no testing infrastructure, no security updates. If that is not what was meant, then a new announcement clarifying the points is in order. > architectures that would be released and officially supported but not > distributed from ftp.d.o. I think the vancouver proposal, or at least its announcement was profundly lacking in clarity, and didn't clearly separate the three different problems and their solutions : 1) mirror bandwidth and space issues. 2) release management and autobuilders. 3) security update for stable releases. Am i not right in thinking that those where the key issues, and you that was there, do you not think it would be welcome of the vancouver-cabal :) to clarify their remedies for each of those points separatedly ? > The fundamental idea I'm trying to capture is "less popular" or > "minority interest" or something, but I can't think of a way to do that > that (a) doesn't sound offensive and (b) isn't incredibly wordy. "ports" > is the best I've heard so far. well, it probably sounds offensive because the proposed solution is offensive in the first place, isn't it ? And ports, well, its all nice, but how do you measre inegality in port treatment then ? will we have scp or something such ? Friendly, Sven Luther -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]