On Thu, Feb 09, 2012 at 03:45:50AM +0100, Guillem Jover wrote: > While this could benefit the multiarch installations (for which they > can easily use --path-exclude), it would use lots more space on single > arch installations.
Does it really? A quick test tells me that uncompressing every file under /usr/share/doc does indeed increase the size of that directory on my laptop by a factor of approximately two: After running "sudo find /usr/share/doc -name '*.gz' -exec gunzip {} \;", the size of that directory is as reported by 'du -s' is 1263220 kibibytes, while it was 757280 before, a difference of 505940. This is on a system with 2524 packages installed, for a grand total of... dpkg-query -W -f '${Installed-Size}\n' | awk '{TOT+=$0} END{print TOT}' 8830371 ... approximately 8.5GiB of installed software. While I agree that adding around 500MiB to that installed size is significant, I wouldn't define it as 'lots more space'. Additionally, it should be possible for dpkg to support compressing at install time for those users who request it, based on a configuration parameter. -- The volume of a pizza of thickness a and radius z can be described by the following formula: pi zz a
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