The debate is being hard to follow, with tiers, classes of citizenship and several other distinctions being tossed about, and not always clearly mapped to a particular one of the two divisions in the plan. I propose the following terminology (also paraphrasing the outline of the plan according to my understanding):
1. A MEMBER architecture is one that the upload queue scripts knows what to do about. The criteria for being a MEMBER are - must provide basic Unix functionality - must have a working buildd - must have X users, Y of which must be DDs - (et cetera) 2. MEMBER architectures are divided into IRREGULAR and REGULAR architectures. REGULAR architectures make stable releases in lock-step; thus problems on one REGULAR architecture can block the release of all others. The release process for REGULAR architectures is controlled by the DPL-appointed release team, currently using the "testing" suite as a common staging area. The criteria for being REGULAR are - must be a MEMBER - must have a working installer - must have redundant buildd capacity - (et cetera) An IRREGULAR architecture either does not make releases, or release according to a schedule that does not match the REGULAR one. (One possible instance of this is "we'll try to parallel the REGULAR release, but they are not going to wait for us if we blow a tyre along the way"). The porters must provide their own release management and staging area (management). 3. Certain REGULAR architectures are sufficiently in demand that they will distributed through the entire official mirror network. They are WIDESPREAD architectures. The criteria for being WIDESPREAD is that the ftpmasters judge that there is sufficient demand for download bandwidth to justify mirroring (either by the 10% rule or something else). Architectures that are not found on primary mirrors are NARROWSPREAD ones. They have aptable repositories somewhere in *.debian.org and are mirrored only by freak idealists with too much disk space for their own good. They can be either REGULAR or IRREGULAR. Neither users nor developers will notice much difference between WIDESPREAD and REGULAR NARROWSPREAD architectures once they have pointed their sources.list to an appropriate server. (Or, as alternative alternative terminology: Widespread -> "utlanning" Narrowspread regular -> "framling" Irregular -> "ramen" Other unix-like OSes -> "varelse" Microsoft Windows -> "djur" ) -- Henning Makholm "Jeg forstår mig på at anvende sådanne midler på folks legemer, at jeg kan varme eller afkøle dem, som jeg vil, og få dem til at kaste op, hvis det er det, jeg vil, eller give afføring og meget andet af den slags." -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]