Hmm, that's new since I last **needed** to look in the man page for it - don't 
tell me you look at man pages for stuff you already know how to do, each time 
you do it ?

I suppose ending up on a mailing list means you're looking for answers, hence there is by definition something you do *not* know (anymore). I guess the first step would be to realize you might *have known*, but not anymore. IMHO the first step shall ideally be (up-to-date) RTFM if you seek to be efficient, especially dealing with (others') time.

<looks on system ...>  <looks on another system ...> Looks like "deprecated" 
was added between ascii and beowulf.
Checking my next oldest system (Debian Wheezy), I see that it includes CIDR 
format. Guess it's a while since I last needed to check the man page for that !

I suppose surprises like that happen more often than one thinks!
A common personal example is new options being introduced in a tool in order to solve something I am (re)trying to work around the hacky/ugly way.

Perhaps it's time for the relevant package to spit out some notice level 
logging when it hits deprecated options ?

I can't imagine the volume of information that would produce on system upgrades, even updates packs. Unreadable, if you ask me: Too much information = No information, as it will be discarded.

Happy network configuration,
Bernard (Beer) Rosset
https://rosset.net/
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