On Thu, May 02, 2024 at 04:05:31PM +0200, Heinrich Schuchardt wrote: > Often I see apt-get update downloads exceeding 100 MiB. That is without a > single package download.
I think it might be worth quantifying this. Right now, for amd64 proposed pocket Packages.xz files for the following: Jammy: main 253K universe 75K Bionic (as an example of a mature release with fewer SRUs in flight): main 131K universe 9.7K There are maybe some extra round trip times to consider, although apt does do HTTP pipelining so I'm not sure. I'm not counting sources, since presumably those with bandwidth constraints would not have them enabled. It's worth noting that I don't expect these to cache (unlike the release pocket) since they change regularly. But these results are much smaller than I was expecting! > When working with a mobile connection this is already problematic. We should > strive to get this number down. Adding proposed is going into the wrong > direction and would only help a tiny fraction of all users. Everything is a trade-off, of course. If we were adding just one byte then perhaps you wouldn't object. So, given the above sizes, do you still hold the same opinion? Robie
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