Ticket #932 (closed defect: invalid)
Installer should configure Oneiric and Wheezy for multiarch
Reported by: | geofft | Owned by: | |
---|---|---|---|
Priority: | high | Milestone: | Precise Beta |
Component: | -- | Keywords: | |
Cc: | Fixed in version: | ||
Upstream bug: |
Description
Once we figure out #931, we're going to want to be installing things like libreadline6:i386 instead of lib32readline6. In order that this work, sources.list needs to read something like
deb [arch=i386,amd64] http://mirrors.mit.edu/ubuntu/ oneiric main restricted universe multiverse
I'm not sure if the Oneiric/Wheezy d-i is going to do this by itself. The fact that the multiarch spec refers to explicitly enabling the repo implies no.
Change History
comment:2 Changed 13 years ago by amu
Good question. Perhaps you could test whether
apt-config shell foo APT::Architectures
produces any output. (Neither checking the availability of multiarch-support nor dpkg --assert-multi-arch will draw the line at the right point on Ubuntu AFAICT, and anyway I gather you are specifically interested in whether APT supports multiple architectures.)
comment:3 follow-up: ↓ 5 Changed 12 years ago by jdreed
The multiarch spec says "sources.list entries not annotated with an architecture name will be interpreted as applying to all configured architectures by default", so I don't in fact think we need to do this. Looking at other examples, we'd need to do it, if, say, the repo supported i386, amd64, and m68k, and we only wanted the first two, or something.
comment:4 Changed 12 years ago by andersk
- Status changed from new to closed
- Resolution set to invalid
The Ubuntu installer configures multiarch for you where appropriate. See /etc/dpkg/dpkg.cfg.d/multiarch on oneiric and precise, or dpkg {--print-architecture|--print-foreign-architectures|--add-architecture|--remove-architecture} on quantal and wheezy. There’s nothing for us to do here.
(Remember kids, debootstrap is not an Ubuntu installer.)
comment:5 in reply to: ↑ 3 Changed 12 years ago by andersk
BTW,
Replying to jdreed:
Looking at other examples, we'd need to do it, if, say, the repo supported i386, amd64, and m68k, and we only wanted the first two, or something.
No, it only matters which architectures the system is configured for, not which architectures the repo supports.
Is there a programmatic way to test for multi-arch support in a distro? Or does it involve "lsb_release -sd" and case statements?