On Thu, 27 Mar 2008, JJDaNiMoTh wrote:
On Fri, 21 Mar 2008 21:37:20 +1000 Allan McRae <allan.mcrae@qimr.edu.au> wrote:
Hi,
I have come to realize that the current way of keeping community64 in sync could use some improving. I realized this when looking at the pkg_diff web page [1] thinking I would build some packages. After being distracted by the internet for a few minutes... I reloaded the page and noticed that some of the packages had been uploaded. Now had I actually built those packages, it would have been a waste of time. Also, I'm never sure how much time to wait and see whether the TU who uploaded the i686 package is going to upload the x86_64 package.
Uhm... maybe the man that has uploaded these packages was I :)
Simply, at this point, with Aaron's building machine and some of us which have 32/64 bit hardware, I don't understand why there are ~ 150 different packages from 32 to 64 bit community.
You also need to consider that the 32 and 64 community repo will never be completely in sync because of lib32 stuff and of packages that don't work on x86_64.
Last thing: we some packages maintained by devs in community or community64 out-of-date, and recompile it seems do not work because the older release. What we need to do?
Inform the maintainer. Offer to do the update for both arch if they are too busy to do it.
Last last: What about dtw? We have a lot of his packages in community out-of-dated [1], in this page [2] seems he isn't a TU, but has 3 bug opened [3]. IMHO, the best is moving all his packages back to unsupported and close bug assigned to him.
[1] http://aur.archlinux.org/packages.php?K=dtw&SeB=m [2] http://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/Trusted_Users [3] http://bugs.archlinux.org/index.php?string=&project=5&search_name=&type[]=&sev[]=&pri[]=&due[]=&reported[]=&cat[]=&status[]=open&percent[]=&opened=&dev=dtw&closed=&duedatefrom=&duedateto=&changedfrom=&changedto=&openedfrom=&openedto=&closedfrom=&closedto=&do=index
I think dtw is unofficially inactive. Email him to ask about his status. -- This message has been scanned for viruses and dangerous content by MailScanner, and is believed to be clean.