ACCEPTED
My mutt said this last night:
894 + Jan 15 Archive Adminis (0,4K) ipcfg_0.1_amd64.changes ACCEPTED
This obviously means that if you wish to use it, you no longer need to go through git; you can just add experimental to sources.list and run 'apt-get install ipcfg'. A few notes, though:
- I missed a few build-dependencies, so it's only available on amd64 for now. Yes, I should use pbuilder more (I did for the 0.3 upload, which went in today).
- The documentation is somewhat lacking. I just found out that the documentation isn't actually installed in the binary package, so you have to download the source package (or check out the git repository). This will be fixed for the next release. The documentation also currently consists of a few .txt files rather than (a) proper man page(s). This will likely take some more time.
- ipcfg Conflicts:, Replaces: and Provides: ifupdown. This is because there is no proper virtual package name for it to conflict/replace/provide. I have filed a bug, #554194, against debian policy, to request it be made, but so far this is not yet finished (and indeed was somewhat dead during the period that I had no time to work on ipcfg). This may confuse some packages that really do depend on ifupdown.
- ifdown works, but not reliably so. This will be my next main point of focus.
- If you use the insserv automatic ordering system for initscripts, then you must either purge ifupdown or remove its initscript before installing ipcfg; otherwise, the availability of two initscripts that provide network configuration will confuse the hell out of insserv.
And in case you wonder why the hell I went from 0.1 to 0.3:
ipcfg (0.2) experimental; urgency=low * Rebuild without .git directory. D'oh. -- Wouter Verhelst Tue, 12 Jan 2010 17:43:09 +0100
srsly
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