Keeping only .jigdo files for i386 DVDs/BDs is enough, and a real DVD-1 or a 
BD-1 iso is not needed to be stored on the server.

Then someone can sell or distribute a set of 'official' amd64 DVDs/BDs with 
companion non-installable i386 DVDs/BDs which can be used without Internet.

________________________________
发件人: acmilan defrag <defrag...@outlook.com>
发送时间: 2024年3月22日 12:27
收件人: debian-cd@lists.debian.org <debian-cd@lists.debian.org>
主题: Request for keeping generating non-installable i386 DVDs/BDs

Dropping i386 DVDs/BDs is making amd64 DVDs/BDs not complete, because offline 
users cannot use multiarch any more, especially wine - amd64 DVDs/BDs only 
contains wine64, not wine32. There are also some legacy i386 softwares not 
upgraded to amd64 in the i386 DVDs/BDs.

Offline users are not so common in common cases in developed countries 
nowadays, but still common in some developing countries and some uncommon cases 
in developed countries. Forcing these offline users connecting to the Internet 
is not friendly, and keeping these DVDs/BDs is not a waste of disk space, but 
instead keep Debian being offline user-friendly.

I think Debian should keep generating a set of non-installable i386 DVDs/BDs in 
trixie at most for offline users. i386 netinst CDs are purely for installation, 
and because i386 is not installable now in trixie, and thus can be removed.

Trixie is planned to be released in 2025, and its LLTS is upto 2035, so its 
safe to release i386 DVDs/BDs in trixie. In forky which are planned to be 
released in 2027, wine should be pure 64-bit without any compatiblity or 
performance problems, and maybe it would be time to drop i386 totally in Debian.

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