Frank Küster <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > Did you read /usr/share/doc/tex-common/README.Debian? If not, would it have > helped you understand the problem?
No, I didn't read it (recently), and yes of course I wouldn't have sent a bug report if I had read it. Or wouldn't I ? Since this problem occured suddenly after an upgrade, I assumed it was yet another debian-messing-around-under-my-feet and I started to hunt the bug as usual. Kind of a conditionned reflex. It didn't occur to me that this new "behavior" was intentional. >> Note for the reader potentially suffering from this problem: adding you to >> this group is not enough. It is not even enough to start a new shell. You >> have to really login again (or maybe newgrp would suffice ?) for the change >> to take effect. If somebody can explain this to me, I'm interested. > > That's how it's always been on UNIX systems. Thanks, I know, but this is no answer to my question. > teTeX folks, I fear we have to revert this change and make the system > insecure by default. I suggest that we change it only for fresh > installations and leave unstable users to chmod -R. I'm not opposed to that change. However, I still consider it a bug to suddenly break working installations without further notice. And no, README.Debian is not enough. There should be at least a big blinking red light somewhere (probably at package upgrade time) warning the users that something has changed. -- Didier Verna, [EMAIL PROTECTED], http://www.lrde.epita.fr/~didier EPITA / LRDE, 14-16 rue Voltaire Tel.+33 (1) 44 08 01 85 94276 Le Kremlin-Bicêtre, France Fax.+33 (1) 53 14 59 22 [EMAIL PROTECTED]