On Mon, Sep 20, 1999 at 01:23:50PM -0700, Joey Hess wrote: > It's now possible in two ways. First, there is the dpkg-reconfigure program, > which you pass a package name, and it lets you see all the questions again.
Excellent. Hopefully if debconf gets folded into the base system, dpkg itself will be able to run this directly, rather than it be an extra step for the user. For example, instead of running (manually, or through apt): dpkg -i <package> dpkg-reconfigure you could just run: dpkg -i --reconfigure <package> I'm probably thinking too far ahead right now, though... > dpkg-repack couldn't currently handle this, and I'd have to modify it to > know about debconf for it to be able to. > > A better approach, perhaps, will be to use the remote database capabilities > of debconf to just pull settings off the old system when you install a > package on the new one. Of course, that's all vaporware at this point. I guess I'm just too eager to roll this out in my labs, and I want that vaporware void filled :) How do you feel about moving the template file out of the debian/ control structure, and into the filesystem? If it was /etc/debconf/<package> instead of debian/templates, dpkg-repack could handle it (and I could start repackaging packages for use in my labs). I don't mean to be pushy, I'm just very excited at the prospect of removing RedHat and replacing it with Debian on all my workstations. -- Scott Barker [EMAIL PROTECTED] Linux Consultant http://www.mostlylinux.ab.ca/scott Looking for a husband? Know anyone looking for a husband? Well, I'm looking for a wife. See http://www.mostlylinux.ab.ca/scott/wife.shtml Want a good deal on a personal computer in Calgary, Alberta, Canada? Visit http://www.mostlylinux.ab.ca/scott/computers.shtml [ Unsolicited commercial and junk e-mail will be proof-read for US$100 ] "I don't pretend to know much about life. You live what you live and most of it doesn't change much from one day to the other. And then some days it just confounds you with the most amazing left turns... At times the unpredictability can be wonderfully sweet; sometimes pretty weird; and once in a while, too sad to speak about except to yourself. Life's a blind punch; you don't know what's hit you 'til it's too late. Guess you just have to close your eyes, stick you chin out, and take what comes. Otherwise you might duck at the wrong time, and miss everything worth living for." - Brick McKenna, "McKenna" (written by Gil Grant)