Hi, The new upstream version of a package I maintain (Cherokee, a lightweight extensible web server) requires the configuration file to be completely rewritten - Version 0.6.x will just not parse 0.5.x's config file. It does ship a converter, but of course, nobody will claim it is perfect.
The new configuration file is not meant to be hand-edited (although it can, it is not a binary registry) So, I'm planning the following flow - Please correct me if you feel I'm missing something: 1- At preinst, ask via Debconf if user wants the script to perform the automatic conversion. 2a- If user does not want automatic conversion, just display what would have been done, and signal the daemon not to start (i.e. setting a variable in /etc/default/cherokee). Should I leave the old Cherokee instance running, or should I leave it in a stopped state? 2b- If the user does want automatic conversion, do it - and leave the daemon running. Leave old configuration as reference, appending .old to filename. Does this sound sensible? Now, regarding the future handling (and that's why I'm Cc:ing Álvaro, the Cherokee author): The configuration is handled by cherokee-admin, a separate Cherokee server with a built-in and limited configuration. I don't think cherokee-admin is expected to be active at all times, but then again, it feels a bit awkward just to issue a command-line argument to start a server whenever I want to tweak my configuration. Do you think cherokee-admin should be started at boot time? (of course, this would be done using a separate initscript) Thanks for your comments. -- Gunnar Wolf - [EMAIL PROTECTED] - (+52-55)5623-0154 / 1451-2244 PGP key 1024D/8BB527AF 2001-10-23 Fingerprint: 0C79 D2D1 2C4E 9CE4 5973 F800 D80E F35A 8BB5 27AF -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]