On Tue, 2008-10-14 at 15:08 -0400, Hal Vaughan wrote: [snip] > As a user, you run apt and get notified that important files > may be changed. [snip]
Sorry, but you've said this several times in this thread, and it's just wrong. Apt/dpkg/whathaveyou do *not* notify the user whenever they are going to change a configuration file - they notify the user only if they are going to change a configuration file *that the user has modified*. Replacing a configuration file that hasn't been modified by the user is done *silently*. Now, it's true that menu.lst is handled differently, but consider: - If you hadn't modified menu.lst, the update-grub should not have materially changed your system. - When you modified menu.lst, it had comments in it saying you should edit it in a particular way, and that certain lines would be modified by a Debian script. If you somehow managed to get in this situation without ever seeing those comments, I'd like to know how - that may be a legitimate bug with some other part of your system. But as it stands, while the menu.lst file is inconsistent with how other configuration files are handled, it seems to me that the only way you can get in trouble is by ignoring documentation that you are forced to read. -- -Julian Blake Kongslie <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> If this is a mailing list, please CC me on replies. vim: set ft=text : -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]