Debian Removes Free Pascal Compiler / Lazarus IDE
forum.lazarus.freepascal.orgIf you plough through the first pages so far as I can tell it seems like actually it won't be removed.
Certainly not FPC, because the hard dependency on GTK2 was a misunderstanding.
For Lazarus it seems like dependency on GTK2 is considered a bug and not a fundamental incompatibility, because there are too many GTK2 applications to completely remove it from Debian.
Bigger issue here is they're removing everything that depends on gtk2.
Well that's a bummer. There's a whole generation of barely-if-at-all-maintained but still perfectly working utils that will probably be forever lost to obscurity with that.
Recently I wish Debian was more Debian.
With the possible exception of Hexchat, I'd wager any such tools were already lost to obscurity.
Does gtk2 still have Debian maintainers? Whatever is in Debian's official repository is effectively endorsed by Debian. If they don't have enough capacity it's wiser to drop support than to sign off on something of unknown quality.
This has been reported here but got not enough attention:
"Debian GNOME team announces intent to remove GTK 2 in Debian 14" (08.01.2026)
https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=46548257
P.S. Still hope GNOME maintainers let other volunteers maintain GTK 2.
- GTK2 is only one of the supported widget sets for Lazarus. It supports Qt5 & 6 too. I feel Lazarus should switch to Qt5 or 6 until GTK3 is mature.
- Hexchat IRC client is another popular application that is still stuck with GTK2.
Considering we're on GTK 4, I think GTK 3 is as mature as it's gonna get.
It seems no distro is safe from deletionists.
That's the curse on the Unix world. At least FreeBSD, NetBSD (OpenBSD not by design, but that's understandable because of security) have their compat libraries on plus some of them (even GTK1) in their ports. On 9front, I just adapted Russ Cox' Xword (some crossword player for XWord files, it has a converter from Across Lite Puz files to Xword) for modern times, barely a few lines changes in some drawing function for software made for Plan9 4ed or close.
PD: Guix can do the same as fbsd and nbsd because, well, setting up an isolated environment with time-bound tools it's basically what Guix was born for, reproducibility. Scientific repo for a paper must be run point to point as we had a Slackware setup with Slackbuilds in 2007? That's the point of Guix. You would say... docker. But docker it's overkill.
Didn't FreeBSD recently dropped their 32 bits x86 version ? At some point every open source OS will remove the parts for which no one is willing to put the work on maintaining it.