Luk,
There is no desire to trim working architectures.
It's very easy to tell there is nothing wrong when you don't have to
deal with unreliable build daemons, endless discussions but no visible
progress (except for java support) and complaints from DSA, package
maintainers and others.
If you looked at https://buildd.debian.org/stats/graph-big.png I think
it is obvious hppa is not *that* broken. hppa is >95% built. That is not
that bad. Of course, it can be better, but if you looked at this with a
historical perspective the port is really in a pretty good shape.
If you looked at the status of the toolchain posted to the
gcc-testresults page: http://gcc.gnu.org/ml/gcc-testresults/2009-06/
you can see that hppa is one of the better architectures out there. Our
results are on par with (if not better than) other supported architectures.
IMHO hppa contributed a lot to getting Debian packages (and upstream)
properly fixed to build properly across many other architectures and
making it easier for new architectures to get incorporated into Debian.
It's unfortunate that parisc is no longer a commercially popular
platform, but why should not affect whether Debian supports it?
It's obvious from the recent exchange that there are still people on the
hppa team (and other Debian maintainers) that are willing to work on
this architecture to make things better. Also by many metrics it is
still very much a working architecture. It's really a shame that
Debian's considering dropping support for HPPA in Squeeze. Please
reconsider.
randolph
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