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Re: would anybody use binary packages for NetBSD/i386 10?



On Sun, Aug 13, 2023 at 08:32:20AM -0400, Greg Troxel wrote:
In contemplating bulk builds and resources, I wonder if there are still
people who:

 are running NetBSD/i386 (as opposed to amd64)

I have an old i386 System that is on 9.3, once 10.0
is released I plan on upgrading that system to 10.0.
Unless there is a 9.4.  But I feel eventually 10.0 release
will end up on the i386 I have.

 are using the binary packges from quarterly branches on ftp.netbsd.org

On that i386, I use quarterly branches now via 9.3,
but for 10.0, I am *not* sure if I would need quarterly.
I will never use X on that system and since most security
issues I care about seem to occur with Firefox and Friends,
I doubt I would benefit from quarterly branches on the i386.

 are running NetBSD 10 already, or who intend to move to it soon or
 after release

Right now I only have 10.0-BETA on an amd64.  I am in
the process of upgrading that to the newest nightly
build now :)

If you have a system that meets the above, please either reply here (the
first few people :-) or just answer me privately.  (I'd also be
interested in which category below your use is.)

Basically, I would think about not doing bulk builds if very few want
them, relative to the effort/resources required to create them.

For i386, I think I could live with that since what I
would be compiling are just TUI and command-line items.
But I do have a diskspace/performance concern with compiles,
which I should be able to deal with.

My guess is that at this point, i386 use is limited to

 a) old embedded-type systems (soekris)
 b) systems that are running i386 because they were first installed many
    years ago and haven't been converted to amd64 for no good reason or
    for some odd special case odd reason
 c) build systems to support category a/b systems, for testing or
    building private binary package sets
 d) retrocomputing

Item "d" is me.

and that the amount of use with ftp.n.o binary packages is extremely
small.

As a personal example -- and I am somewhat trailing edge -- I know of
two NetBSD/i386 systems in category b (one each no good reason and one
special case odd reason), and 2 in category c.  I have one system that
would be category a, replaced several years ago and powered off because
it was underpowered, that I might or might not ever power up again, and
if I did I wouldn't use ftp.n.o packages on it.

Thanks for your efforts,
John

--
[t]csh(1) - "An elegant shell, for a more... civilized age."
                        - Paraphrasing Star Wars


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