Hi Andrea, Thanks for the feedback.
We all understand that there are valid use cases that will not be addressed as well in 12.10 without alternate CDs. But there is a real cost to developing, QAing, and releasing these images; we don't get them for free, and we need to ask ourselves whether, by continuing to maintain them, we're missing out on opportunities to spend the time doing other things better. For a long time, the team has already intended to drop the Ubuntu alternate images once ubiquity's disk support was complete; and the Kubuntu developers have indicated that they are thinking along this same line. The only difference now is that I'm proposing we drop the alternate CDs while disk support is one step short of "complete". So we want to gather as much information as we can about how users are using the alternate CD today and make sure we are directing users to suitable replacements - or if there really is no suitable replacement, consider whether those missing features are a sufficient reason to keep the alternate CDs around. But RAID support alone is not likely to be sufficient reason, given the range of fallback solutions I already mentioned. On Tue, Aug 28, 2012 at 07:01:59AM +0300, [email protected] wrote: > On 28 August 2012 00:50, Steve Langasek <[email protected]> wrote: > > As part of ongoing efforts to reduce the number of images we ship for > > Ubuntu, and to make the desktop image more useful in a variety of scenarios, > > Dmitrijs Ledkovs has been hard at work in quantal adding support for LVM, > > cryptsetup, and RAID to ubiquity. > For two valid reasons: > 1) you can't imagine how many time the alternate installer saved my, > when ubiquity wasn't able to boot on some computer. If there are cases where the alternate CD boots and the desktop CD doesn't, those are bugs that it's important to fix. Users should get a good experience when they download the CD that they're pointed at on the ubuntu.com website; having the CD fail to boot and then be pointed to download a *second* CD is not a good experience. Nor is it a good experience if they're handed a pre-pressed Ubuntu desktop CD and it fails to boot. If removing the crutch of the alternate CD causes users to actually *report* the issues they're having with the desktop CD (because, btw, I'm not aware of any outstanding reports that the desktop CD is not bootable), then that's a *good* thing. And if there are bugs with booting the desktop CD, then some of the developer time saved by not maintaining the alternate CDs can be used to make sure those bugs get fixed. > 2) You need it to setup RAID and I don't want to risk to mess my data > assembling a degraded RAID or something like that. Sorry, but I don't find this persuasive. First of all because there are other ways to do the install that don't require you to assemble a degraded RAID, if that's your concern; second, because when properly assembled, a degraded RAID is no more dangerous than a non-RAID install; and third, because at install time there's no data at risk because it's a fresh install. So aside from the fact that all the other options for installing RAID on a desktop are a little more cumbersome than the alternate CD, which is already known, this really comes down to personal preference. On Wed, Aug 29, 2012 at 12:49:27PM +0300, [email protected] wrote: > On 29 August 2012 12:04, Dmitrijs Ledkovs <[email protected]> wrote: > > For the above to reasons you can use: > > * mini or netinst or server images > > Which are "Alternative Installer" without packages, the latest > > versions will be retrieved over the network. > > Are you doing installs where there is (i) no network available and > > (ii) no local mirror available? > yes, sometimes network is not available or we have a slow DSL > connection (2 Mbit). > We also have to make many installs. It's already a big work to > download all updates, but if we had to download all packages due to a > netinstall it would be even more hard. If you're doing a large number of installs, then you should consider setting up a local mirror (or caching apt proxy) and using preseeding. This is already best practice for large site installs, whether using alternate or desktop CDs or netbooting. Hope that helps, -- Steve Langasek Give me a lever long enough and a Free OS Debian Developer to set it on, and I can move the world. Ubuntu Developer http://www.debian.org/ [email protected] [email protected]
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