** Description changed: [Impact] php-ast cannot be used without manual intervention [Test case] Check to see which file is installed: Bad = /etc/php/mods-available/ast.ini Good = /etc/php/7.0/mods-available/ast.ini [Regression Potential] Virtually none since this is just a rebuild. $ reverse-depends src:php-ast No reverse dependencies found $ reverse-depends -b src:php-ast No reverse dependencies found + This has already been fixed in Yakkety with the auto-sync from Debian. [Original bug report] Using apt-get to install the php-ast package results in the .ini file being created at /etc/php/mods-available/ast.ini instead of /etc/php/7.0/mods-available/ast.ini like other php extensions. This requires a user to copy the ast.ini file to the correct location in order to 'sudo phpenmod ast', otherwise an error is given when trying to activate the module. With the ast.ini in the correct location all worked as expected. NOTE: When this module is installed it also doesn't enable automatically as part of the install. Perhaps because of this error. This was reported to the extention maintainers (https://github.com/nikic /php-ast/issues/27) who felt this should be reported to downstream packaging.
** Description changed: [Impact] - php-ast cannot be used without manual intervention + php-ast cannot be used in Ubuntu 16.04 LTS without manual intervention [Test case] Check to see which file is installed: Bad = /etc/php/mods-available/ast.ini Good = /etc/php/7.0/mods-available/ast.ini [Regression Potential] Virtually none since this is just a rebuild. $ reverse-depends src:php-ast No reverse dependencies found $ reverse-depends -b src:php-ast No reverse dependencies found This has already been fixed in Yakkety with the auto-sync from Debian. [Original bug report] Using apt-get to install the php-ast package results in the .ini file being created at /etc/php/mods-available/ast.ini instead of /etc/php/7.0/mods-available/ast.ini like other php extensions. This requires a user to copy the ast.ini file to the correct location in order to 'sudo phpenmod ast', otherwise an error is given when trying to activate the module. With the ast.ini in the correct location all worked as expected. NOTE: When this module is installed it also doesn't enable automatically as part of the install. Perhaps because of this error. This was reported to the extention maintainers (https://github.com/nikic /php-ast/issues/27) who felt this should be reported to downstream packaging. ** Changed in: php-ast (Ubuntu Xenial) Status: Triaged => In Progress ** Changed in: php-ast (Ubuntu) Status: Triaged => Fix Released -- You received this bug notification because you are a member of Ubuntu Bugs, which is subscribed to Ubuntu. https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/1577495 Title: ast.ini installed/placed incorrectly To manage notifications about this bug go to: https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/php-ast/+bug/1577495/+subscriptions -- ubuntu-bugs mailing list ubuntu-bugs@lists.ubuntu.com https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-bugs