On Tuesday 05 June 2007 15:14, Anthony Towns wrote:
I'm not sure if avoiding duplicating the data (1G of data is bad, but
1G of the same data in a .orig.tar.gz _and_ a .deb is absurd) is enough
to just use the existing archive and mirror network, or if it'd still
be worth setting up a separate apt-able archive under debian.org
somewhere for _really_ big data.
IMO it would be worth it if we could split out gigabytes of data from the
main archive and thus significantly reduce the bandwidth needed for
mirror syncs. Especially if that data is only used by an extremely small
subset of users/developers.
The advantages would be:
- overall reduced use of resources like disk space and bandwidth
- lower the barrier to create local mirrors, not only for home users,
but also for mirrors in areas that are not that well connected to
the rest of the world [1]
- make it possible to not include such data on the regular binary CDs,
but for example on separate arch-independent "data" CDs