Re: Deleting uncompressed Info/Doc files at upgrades
Hi,
>>"Chris" == Chris Waters <[email protected]> writes:
Chris> Manoj Srivastava wrote:
>> I agree with you there. dpkg, or any other program, should not
>> second guess the human this way.
Chris> Excuse me? Couldn't dpkg's *entire* job be described as second guessing
Chris> the human?
Hell, no. dpkg does exactly what I tell it to do -- you must
have a strange relationship with your package manager. I tell dpkg
what packages to hold, to upgrade, etc. I know which files are likely
to be affected (they are in /var/lib/dpkg/info/*.list
Chris> The tricky part is and always has been getting it right:
Chris> obvious things like, "you don't want to install that without the
Chris> libraries it requires," are easy, but it's still second
Chris> guessing.
I think you don not know the meaning of the phrase second
guession, or you should really take charge of your machine.
Chris> In the case of compressed vs. uncompressed files, dpkg is already
Chris> capable of this. Just move the files in question to a separate package,
Chris> provide two versions of the package, with and without compression, and
Chris> voila!
So you want to double the number of packages there are, and
set up packages which are duplicates except for the doc files? What a
waste of archive space. I object.
The object of this discussion was to make sure that the
uncompressed doc files are updated on an upgrade, and I can do that
with a <20 lines shell script.
This does not belong in the package management system A
simple, 18 line script does that for the doc and info dirsm and can
be run out of cron.
manoj
--
It is by the fortune of God that, in this country, we have three
benefits: freedom of speech, freedom of thought, and the wisdom never
to use either. Mark Twain
Manoj Srivastava <[email protected]> <http://www.datasync.com/%7Esrivasta/>
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