On Fri, Sep 24, 1999 at 11:13:27AM -0400, Scott K. Ellis wrote: > Okay, then solve the problem of which one should actually work on the > standard port? You can't use update-alternatives if the software is > launched in a different manner. If you have such an advanced setup, it > isn't really that hard to build it yourself, or use --force.
I do not believe that any network daemon should automatically start grabbing resources without asking. By installing a package, I only consent to commiting disk space and the resoureses needed to get it actually on the disk. Anything beyond that should be asked for. Some polite packages do ask nicely whether to use inetd or to start via an /etc/init.d file. Other ones ask which port to run on or even if to run at all. Why shouldn't *all* daemon packages ask these questions, and whether to even run *upon install*? I do not like the idea of a daemon starting up with a default configuration that I have not double checked upon installation. I consider automatically starting with no choice a misfeature. And as to the idea that if I run a 'complex' system, I should dl the package and recompile is not a good one. We have not defined 'complex' and 'simple' except trivially; if you do something that isn't possible with the current tools, then it is complex. We cannot afford that definition. It would hinder us. Running multiple daemons providing the same service is reasonable and expected in a production environment and *even* in the home of an enterprising user. The real question is not "why not" by "how". Ciao! -- We is confronted with insurmountable opportunities. -- Walt Kelly, "Pogo" The Doctor What: Second Baseman http://docwhat.gerf.org/ [EMAIL PROTECTED] (finger [EMAIL PROTECTED] for PGP key) KF6VNC