On Fri, Dec 3, 2010 at 12:38 PM, Matthias Klose <[email protected]> wrote: > see http://wiki.debian.org/ToolChain/DSOLinking
Thanks, I'm familiar with the Debian effort and agree this change is a good thing. My question is more on the Ubuntu side: there are ~400 packages (or more) that would require diffs from Debian to fix since Debian is frozen. A few of the fixes might make it to unstable (or experimental), but overall that's a big chunk that will be in Ubuntu this release and not in Debian. Ubuntu will need a decent push to get all those packages fixed up in time for the next release or the release would have lots of FTBFS in the archive (even though the packages that have already been compiled are still usable.) Is than an Ubuntu effort to address all those packages, or is it a low priority since nothing is "broken" from an end user point of view? -- ubuntu-devel mailing list [email protected] Modify settings or unsubscribe at: https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-devel
