Lennart Poettering [2014-12-05 14:52 +0100]: > To be honest I find the entire stuff with ENABLED=true/false really > questionnable, I think it would be agreat step ahead to get rid of > it. (But then again, I cannot make Debian's decisions there...)
Indeed it is. It has never really been necessary, as all init systems have their canonical way of disabling/enabling things: SysV with the /etc/rc?.d/ symlinks, systemd with the wants/ symlinks, upstart with empty .override files. And Debian even has a script "update-rc.d enable|disable foo" which does that for all init systems. So the ENABLED in /etc/default/foo has always been entirely redundant and confusing. Fortunately it isn't that widespread, but some packages need to be cleaned up there. Anyway, quite a far disgression into distro specific oddities now. :-) > > Only preinst can (getting the "install" or "upgrade" argument), not postinst > > (getting "configure" in both case). And we need to run the preset/enable in > > postinst (meaning: after unpacking). > > This sounds quite a limitation. Maybe you can keep a couple of touch files > in /var/lib/ somewhere where you store whether you already applied > "systemctl preset" before? It's not a limitation, the postinst *can* differ between initial install and upgrade by looking at $2 (the "most recently configured version"). If it's empty, it's a new install. Martin -- Martin Pitt | http://www.piware.de Ubuntu Developer (www.ubuntu.com) | Debian Developer (www.debian.org) _______________________________________________ systemd-devel mailing list [email protected] http://lists.freedesktop.org/mailman/listinfo/systemd-devel
