Joey Hess <jo...@debian.org> writes: > Goswin von Brederlow wrote: >> pkg:arch will still be unique and the dpkg/apt output will use the >> architecture where required for uniqueness. So I think that after some >> getting used to it it will be clear enough again. > > Here are a few examples of the problems I worry about. I have not > verified any of them, and they're clearly biased toward code I am > familiar with, which suggests there are many other similar problems. > > * Puppet not only installs packages, it may remove them. A puppet config > that does dpkg --purge foo will fail if multiarch is enabled, now > it needs to find and remove foo:* > > * dpkg-repack pkg:arch will create a package with that literal name (or fail) > > * dpkg-reconfigure probably can't be used with M-A same packages. > debconf probably generally needs porting to multiarch. > > * tasksel uses dpkg --query to work out if a task's dependencies are > installed. In the event that a library is directly part of a task, > this will fail when multiarch is enabled. > > * Every piece of documentation that gives commands lines manipulating > library packages is potentially broken. > > Seems like we need a release where multiarch is classed as an > experimental feature, which when enabled can break the system. But the > sort of problems above are the easy to anticipate ones; my real worry is > the unanticipated classes of problems. Especially if we find intractable > problems or levels of complexity introduced by dropping the unique > package name invariant. > > My nightmare scenario is that we release with multiarch, discover that > it's a net negative for our users (proprietary software on amd64 aside, > nearly all the benefits are to developers AFAICS), and are stuck with it.
The specs were initialy written in such a way that single arch systems would not change, that multiarch packages would keep functioning with a mono-arch apt/dpkg and I think this was preserved so far. If all interface changes foolow that idea then worst case tools will not work in a multiarch configuration but still work in a monoarch configuration. So let multiarch be experimental and only for developers and risk takers. That is already a huge number of people. MfG Goswin -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to debian-dpkg-requ...@lists.debian.org with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact listmas...@lists.debian.org Archive: http://lists.debian.org/87zkc9y6p4.fsf@frosties.localnet