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Seeing this from the distro side, I agree with Evan. A distro will default to building all the glue up front, partly to ensure the user can do whatever they want, and partially "because they can". Even though the glue is dynamically loaded, the distro will still pre-build them all. The only options you get are whether the resulting binaries are packaged in one big package (likely) or split into one per glue layer (unlikely, as they'd be conservative and want to make sure the user isn't confused by a partial install). Sometimes this can lead to problems, but this is how the distros do it. Given the size of a standard desktop install, I don't think this is a "big" problem (heh) but that's how it works. The case where support is added "on the fly" is a rarely used one - I've seen it for codecs and that's about it, and even then all the codes are pre-built and pre-packaged.
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