Am Mittwoch, den 08.01.2020, 08:17 +0100 schrieb Philip Hands: > Daniel Leidert <dleid...@debian.org> writes: > ... > > Please ask during installation and give the question an appropriate > > priority. > > By choosing the priority you can even achieve a "silent" transition for > > "normal" users and let more advanced users decide. > > This strikes me as clutter that will never be removed from debconf, so > let's not decide to do that for every package that might need a timer.
Why should this question ever been removed? What is your goal? Getting rid of cron-jobs? > How about modifying the shipped /etc/default/spamassassin to include a > comment explaining what's going on, and how to enable the timer instead? > > Anyone who's set CRON=1 will then get warned about the maintainer's > modified version, which should catch their attention. Everyone else > will get a handy hint about the new setup if they ever go to set CRON=1 > in future. And what s the benefit of this change: Getting rid of cron? The very simple thing is: CRON=1 enables a cron job. It does *not* say: "Please enable something different as long as it achieves the same." There is nothing wrong with the cron job and it works perfectly fine. So I don't want to have it replaced by something less transparent. Why do you resist the appropriate behavior of raising a question whether the user wants you to replace cron by systemd? Regards, Daniel
signature.asc
Description: This is a digitally signed message part