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Re: Debian-Med policy proposal: 64-bit & little-endian only* for new packages



Hi,

I'm personally fine with Michaels suggestion in general.

Am Fri, Mar 29, 2024 at 10:13:40AM +0530 schrieb Nilesh Patra:
> 
> 
> On 28 March 2024 7:21:01 pm IST, "Michael R. Crusoe" <crusoe@debian.org> wrote:
> 
> There are also packages inside debian med umbrella which are not necessarily related to medicine or bioinformatics. These include some general purpose python packages, some C/C++ libraries et. al. There are packages that reverse-depend on the same. I don't think it's a good idea to remove 32 bit support in *all* the packages that are under our umbrella, but probably only the ones that are end-user applications.

When reading Michaels proposal I also was thinking about generic
libraries we are packaging as pre-dependencies for our end-user
applications.  I'd be fine with mentioning those as exceptions from what
I consider perfectly sensible for the packages that are really targeting
at our user base.
 
> It may be good to move packages not related to medicine to different teams over time but some of them actually don't fit into any availability team as per my understanding and may have to be moved to debian/ namespace.
> 
> What do you think?

I'm not convinced that moving package out of our focus is a good idea.
When we did so in the past these packages somehow went out of our focus
and we hear back from them only by testing removal warnings.  I have no
problem with moving packages if there is some request from somewhere
else and thus there is some convincing interest that the package is
maintained properly.  But I would not browse the packages maintained by
our team, check which might be of general interest, seek in what other
team it might be appropriate, become a member of that team and maybe
learn that this team has quite a different policy than we have (as I
learned in DPT recently).

In short:  Keep on maintaining what we have and apply common sense
where to restrict the architectures sensibly.

BTW. actively restricting the architectures for existing packages just
creates work for no use.  I think we should simply focus on new packages
and those that create some troublesome bug reports that we can deal
with by removing unused architectures.

One other hint: I consider it a good idea to forward our proposed change
of policy to debian-devel@l.d.o (once we agreed upon the change - maybe
in some MR) for two reasons:

  1. There might be a chance we have overlooked something.
  2. There might be other teams that are interested in a similar
     change of policy.

> >and on the Debian-Med Matrix channel for instant discussions: https://app.element.io/#/room/#debian-med:matrix.org
> 
> I'll be happy to open another thread about it, but while we are at it, do you think it makes sense to make this as our official communication media?
> 
> Most of us don't hang out on #debian-med IRC and it would be a little misleading for someone wanting to contact us.

>From my perspective the main drawpack of IRC is that you can't search in
history.  What about setting the title of #debian-med IRC pointing to
our matrix channel?  This would make easily clear what we prefered as
communication channel.
 
> Should we just close the IRC channel and endorse the matrix channel as the official one?

I do not use it but it makes sense to ask on IRC whether people
like this channel for whatever reason.
 
BTW, the Debian Med team is maintaining lots of packages in R pkg team -
most prominently r-bioc-* packages but there are more packages dedicated
to our user base.  We should probably also write a R pkg policy (which
is long overdue).  For the moment it would be easy to make sure at least
new r-bioc-* packages are restricted to the said architectures by adding
this to dh-r.

Kind regards
    Andreas.

-- 
https://fam-tille.de


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