On 12/13/2016 08:04 PM, Balló György via arch-dev-public wrote:
2016. 12. 13, kedd keltezéssel 12.29-kor Doug Newgard ezt írta:
On Tue, 13 Dec 2016 19:16:53 +0100 Balló György via arch-dev-public <arch-dev-public@archlinux.org> wrote:
-1 for dropping i686 completely.
+1 for introducing automated builds, even if it's less secure.
I would like to keep i686 supported, and willing to do anything that is needed to setup and maintain an official automated build server for i686 packages (and possibly for other architectures).
I've got to ask, why do you feel so strongly about it? It's been pointed out that i686 really doesn't fit in with the original goals of Arch anymore, is less and less supported upstream, and essentially untested. What is the compelling reason for keeping it around?
Because I still use an i686-only system occasionally, and I prefer to keep old hardware working with my favourite distribution. I agree that building packages manually for a small percentage of users is pointless. But most of the packages can be built for i686 without any modifications. We just need an automated build server, which takes the job.
-- György Balló Trusted User
If we have reproduceable builds we could also use this buildserver to build the x64 packages. I know that this is a huge task, but then we could automate the package building better in a centralized place. And instead of dropping i686 we could integrate arm as well. Those will not be officially supported, but we could give people access to fix those arch specific problems. Normal maintainers can focus on x64 development while some others have a place to distribute and maintain other architectures of their favorite os.