Hi Brent, you should give Callbacks [1] a chance. We use this for years. Minor (4.2.11 > 4.2.12) version updates are done without any modification. Sometimes even major (4.2.12 > 4.4.0) updates can be make without changing a callback file.
Chris [1] https://www.bestpractical.com/docs/rt/4.2/writing_extensions.html#Callbacks Am 11.11.2015 um 03:53 schrieb Parish, Brent: > Good catch! > > > > I’m sure other people have better ways to do this, but this is what > works for me in our environment: > > > > First I copy the original RT file into the local/ directory tree (per > standard RT modification practices). > > But I make two copies there – one is named with a “.orig” file extension. > > e.g. > > Tabs > > Tabs.orig > > > > The .orig file is a copy of the original Tabs file (at the time I > modified it, lets say version 4.0.9. > > After I run an upgrade (e,g, to 4.2.12), I first do a ‘diff’ on the > Tabs.orig (remember, that is 4.0.9) against the new Tabs (4.2.12). > > If the files are the same (no changes in the new version of RT), I keep > my changed Tabs file as-is. > > If there are changes in the new rev, I must manually merge my changes > into it. > > (and then copy the new version (original) as the new Tabs.orig, ready > for the next upgrade). > > > > A nice side effect of this is that I can run a ‘find’ command after each > upgrade for *.orig, to ensure I am merging all code changes. > > > > Just my 2 cents. > > - Brent >
