Aron Xu <happyaron...@gmail.com> writes: > On Mon, Apr 30, 2012 at 22:21, Goswin von Brederlow <goswin-...@web.de> wrote: >> Aron Xu <happyaron...@gmail.com> writes: >> >>> But what if I endianness does matters for those gettext .mo files? >>> Installing them as libfoo-translations-be and libfoo-translations-le >>> will need some change in gettext support of those >>> applications/libraries, that is finding mo files in alternative paths, >>> and choosing the right one when being built (cross or not) and run >>> (host or qemu). >> >> Yes it does. Or maybe not. Lets talk about the general case instead of >> gettext (gettext uses /usr/share/... so they must be arch independent). >> >> With libfoo being in /usr/lib/<M-A tuple>/ any endian dependent data >> should be in /usr/lib/<package>/<M-A tuple>/ or /usr/lib/<M-A >> tuple>/<M-A tuple>/ (sorry, did we pick one of them as standard yet?), >> which is usualy a configure option. >> > > /usr/lib/<tuple>/package/ is more natural with Autotools and CMake, > which I prefer to use.
Ok, lets stick with that then. >>> M-A:foreign is questionable. How do we specify dependencies in >>> d/control? If libfoo requires either libfoo-data-be or libfoo-data-le >>> on different architectures, do we really want to hard code which >>> architecture to depend on which package manually? >> >> For the moment I don't see any other choice. If this is a frequent >> problem then some dpkg support could be added or some debhelper >> tool. Detecting the endianness at compile time and setting a substvar >> would be relatively easy even now. >> > > Yes, detecting endianness at compile time and setting substvar is For example: echo >>debian/$(PKG).substvars "endian:Depends=libfoo-data-$(shell dpkg-architecture -qDEB_HOST_ARCH_ENDIAN)" > easy, but again if those packages are arch:any, then they'll actually > consume a lot of space on our mirrors (discussed at -devel before). Just for wheezy: Does that matter? We aren't talking about many package and not a lot of data (yet). I totaly agree that in the long term it is a terrible solution to duplicate all the data for all archs when we only need 2 copies. But at the moment I'm more concerned to get something that is installable in wheezy. As long as the solution isn't too hard to get out of again for wheezy+1 I don't quite care so much about mirror space. >>> Generating data files for both be and le then making it an arch:all >>> and M-A:foreign package is not a solution for all maintainers, as this >>> requires to patch the software which upstream are tend to reject of >>> inclusion in many cases. Generating such data files in maintainer >>> scripts is another thing I hate because I believe these data meant to >>> have checksum stored in the package file list so that users can verify >>> its integrity when needed. >> >> There is no one solution for all maintainers. >> > > If we want to reduce the mirror space consumed by such a package, > building arch:all package is a straightforward solution without > modifying archive management software and dpkg/apt, but it's again not > a good choice because we have to keep using binary upload mechanism That would be fine with me for wheezy if the maintainer is ok with that. > (or the maintainer will be required to patch the software so it can > generate both be/le data during a single buildd run). If the software can generate both that usualy means it can also easily use both and then you don't need the be/le destinction anymore. That is the ideal solution. But not always feasable, esspecially not for wheezy. >> At the moment and given the closeness of the freeze I would just do >> whatever works for now. If that means big and little endian flavours of >> the library have to conflict (libfoo-data-be conflicts libfoo-data-le) >> because the path can't be untangeled then I would still think that would >> be better than no multiarch support at all. The most common case is >> amd64+i386 and adding armel is probably the next common. So most >> multiarch users would be ok. >> >> MfG >> Goswin > > I agree on your opinion. It's much better than nothing. But we do need > to discover possible solution for Wheezy+1 or even Wheezy+2, don't we? > :-) Yes. Just keep the two discussion ('what to do now' and 'what to do long term') clearly seperate. So far I've only been concerned with the NOW part. MfG Goswin -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to debian-devel-requ...@lists.debian.org with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact listmas...@lists.debian.org Archive: http://lists.debian.org/8762cg11a5.fsf@frosties.localnet