Duncan <1i5t5.dun...@cox.net> writes: > Sam James posted on Wed, 26 Jun 2024 01:06:12 +0100 as excerpted: > >> Arthur Zamarin <arthur...@gentoo.org> writes: >> >>> As you all know, Gentoo supports many various arches, in various >>> degrees (stable, dev, exp). Let me explain those 3 statuses fast: >>> >>> * stable arch - meaning we have stable profile for this arch, and >>> stable keywords across base-system + varying degree of seriousness. We >>> stable stuff after ~30 days in tree, and are mostly happy. For example >>> the well known and common amd64 arch. >> >> This mixes the notion of keywords vs profiles. >> >> You can have a stable profile in profiles.desc without any stable >> keywords at all. >> >> 'stable' in profiles.desc means we require CI to pass for its depgraph >> consistency. 'dev' means we warn on it. 'exp' means it doesn't even show >> up unless you opt-in with pkgcheck etc. > > While that may clear things up from a developer perspective,
The discussion we're currently having *is* from a developer perspective where I'm trying to clarify something Arthur said for the purposes of further discussion. > > How would it differ if they're already running ~x86 vs stable x86 > (keywording), assuming the same currently stable x86 profile? > > And (again from a user perspective) how does dropping x86 to dev differ > from the mentioned apparently worse alternative, mass dekeywording? An inconsistent depgraph is a very poor experience for users because there's no guarantee emerge can resolve things.