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<pre>On Tue, Jun 28, 2016 at 9:54 AM, Dimitri John Ledkov <<a href="https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-devel">xnox at ubuntu.com</a>> wrote:
<meta http-equiv="content-type" content="text/html; charset=utf-8">><i> 18.10+:
</i>><i> * Stop providing i386 port
</i>><i> * Run legacy i386 only application in snaps / containers / virtual machines</i>
In terms of running legacy i386 applications in
snaps / containers / VMs only, Wine is a major user of 32-bit
libraries which I didn't seen mentioned on this thread. Many of the
apps people run with Wine are legacy 32-bit only Windows applications
where recompiling to 64-bit is simply not an option.
Wine users should be fine using a 64-bit .iso image for install purposes,
but the need to package a full set of 32-bit libraries would be a major
burden for wine packagers. In particular Wine needs access to the graphics
stack, the 32-bit version of which was mentioned in this thread as possibly expendable.
<pre></pre>By way of disclosure, I am the product manager for CodeWeavers' CrossOver, a
commercial wrapper for Wine. I think all Wine users would be negatively impacted
if 32-bit libraries were no longer available from Ubuntu, however. Please keep
that in mind as you decide when and whether to drop 32-bit libraries or merely
cease building 32-bit install .isos.
We'd really like to have the libraries stick around.
Thanks,
Josh
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