On Tue, Jun 10, 2014 at 11:29:41PM +0100, Matthew Garrett wrote: > Ok, I was entirely unaware of that, and it does change things. Thanks > for letting me know. I'll look into whether it's practical to generate a > list of all the existing ExcludeArch packages and automatically check > whether they have tracker bugs filed - does that seem helpful? It > *would* be good to have meaningful metrics on this, but I don't want > there to be excessive process overhead. I pulled git and have the following for ExclusiveArch: %{arm}: gda Agda-stdlib amplab-tachyon avgtime avogadro avro clpeak compat-gcc-32 compat-gcc-34 cqrlog derelict dustmite dyninst elk floppy-support ghc-ForSyDe gl3n glusterfs-hadoop grub2 grub-customizer gtkd hadoop hbase hfsplus-tools hive hledger jogl joystick-support keepass ldc liveusb-creator Macaulay2 mcollective-qpid-plugin numactl numad numatop nwchem ocaml-cil ocaml-gsl patchelf perftest perl-Alien-ROOT perl-qpid perl-SOOT pig pure pure-glpk pyode qt-creator root rootplot sbt scilab seamonkey solr sparkleshare sys_basher tango urjtag wine-mono zfs-fuse That's 60. In addition, the following packages are ExclusiveArch: in such a way that ARM is left out but PPC support is claimed: gprolog mono-bouncycastle nant pvs-sbcl xsupplicant for a total of 65. Of those: compat-gcc32 compat-gcc34 floppy-support grub grub-customizer joystick-support liveusb-creator numactl numad numatop seem entirely legitimate. That's 55 packages, several of which can be blamed on a small number of missing dependencies. That's git master. In F20 the number is about the same, which I'm going to assume means that there were some fixes and around the same number of excludes added. (This ignores packages that are ExclusiveArch: %ix86 x86_64 because that's probably unfair - if the maintainer genuinely believes that it makes sense for the package to be x86 only then that's fair) So, two conclusions from this: 1) People are very bad at following policy here. The majority of the packages that are marked ExcludeArch: arm are not in the tracker bug, and most of those don't appear to have a bug filed at all. 2) The rate at which things are being fixed appears to be uninfluenced by (1) - the number of bugs on the tracker may have increased, but the number of packages actually excluded on ARM hasn't. This means that I was grossly overestimating how many packages were broken. I made an assertion without collecting accurate data first, and came to the wrong conclusion. I apologise for that. I'll look at filing bugs against packages that don't appear to have bugs filed, and I'll attempt to add them to the tracker where they exist but aren't listed. -- Matthew Garrett | mjg59@xxxxxxxxxxxxx _______________________________________________ arm mailing list arm@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx https://admin.fedoraproject.org/mailman/listinfo/arm