I would be interested to know what function of AICCU does *not* involve
the presence of a network connection. I cannot find any documentation
that indicates AICCU has any purpose other than setting up and tearing
down AYIYA tunnels. There is no need for such a tool to run if there is
no network connection, unless the tool also monitors network
connectivity.

At least on my Natty system, the aiccu daemon simply terminates when no
network connection is present, so it does not appear to have any ability
to monitor the status of the system's network connectivity (and it
probably shouldn't have that ability--that's really the system
administrator's concern).

So again, I would be interested to know what function of AICCU makes it
useful without a network connection.

I have in fact read the warning you mention. I'd be interested to know
how it applies to my Upstart script and not the one on which Lars Dursig
has been working on. My script does not have a respawn clause, so
assuming AICCU behaves correctly when it's run in the foreground, it
should preserve AICCU's behavior of exiting if there is a connection
problem. I can confirm the script terminates if launched manually when
no network connection is present.

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https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/223825

Title:
  aiccu init.d script will race dhclient (upstart issue?)

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