Hey, One thing that I was aware of before the recent core-updates merge was that the Guix Data Service [1] didn't generate derivations for systems other than x86_64-linux and i686-linux, at least to the same extent as the master branch before the recent core-updates merge. 1: http://data.guix.gnu.org/revision/2fa55c72476c73211cbb2d6b29c05a1ad58a6cf9 (see the Derivations table) I put this down to a bug I wasn't seeing, but now that the core-updates branch has been merged, and now that this effect is showing up on the master branch, I've investigated a little more. I think this is down to the use of package-transitive-supported-systems within the Guix Data Service, but the output of this function for a package can also be seen by running guix package --show. Before the recent core-updates merge: ./pre-inst-env guix package --show=hello … systems: x86_64-linux i686-linux armhf-linux aarch64-linux mips64el-linux After the recent core-updates merge: → guix package --show=hello … systems: x86_64-linux i686-linux Looking at the implementation of package-transitive-supported-systems, I'm pretty sure the change in behaviour is to do with the supported-systems for the new packages involved in the bootstrap process. So in terms of questions I now have, what's the "systems: " output by guix package --show meant to mean, and what does the recent change removing the 3 systems above from most packages in Guix mean? Also, for the Guix Data Service, all I want to know is for a given package, is for which systems and targets a derivation can be reasonably computed. Maybe it is wrong to use package-transitive-supported-systems for this. Thanks, Chris