100 lines
4.6 KiB
Plaintext
100 lines
4.6 KiB
Plaintext
Frequently Asked Questions about base-files
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===========================================
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* Questions about /etc/issue and /etc/debian_version:
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Q. I upgraded my system to the testing distribution and now my /etc/issue
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says "bookworm/sid". Should it not read "bookworm" or "testing"?
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Q. I upgraded my system to the unstable distribution and now my /etc/issue
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says "bookworm/sid". Should it not read "sid" or "unstable"?
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A. That would be nice, but it is not possible because of the way the
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testing distribution works. Packages uploaded for unstable reach
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testing after ten days, provided they are built for every released
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architecture, have no RC-bugs and their dependencies may be met in
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testing. You should consider the testing and unstable distributions as
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two sides of the same coin. Since the base-files package in testing
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was initially uploaded for unstable, the only sensible /etc/issue to
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have is one that is both valid for testing and unstable, hence
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"bookworm/sid" (or whatever is appropriate).
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Q. Why "bookworm/sid" and not "testing/unstable" as it used to be?
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A. The codename is a little bit more informative, as the meaning of
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"testing" changes over time.
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Q. Ok, but how do I know which distribution I'm running?
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A. If you are running testing or unstable, then /etc/debian_version is
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not a reliable way to know that anymore. Looking at the contents of
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your /etc/apt/sources.list file is probably a much better way.
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Q. There is a new point release and I've just upgraded my system.
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The /etc/debian_version file now says 10.x but /etc/issue still says 10.
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Is this ok?
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A. Yes. The release managers asked me not to touch /etc/issue, as that's
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a file which is often customized by the user. The /etc/debian_version file,
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on the other side, is updated at every point release, so that the exact
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Debian version is shown when used by tools like reportbug.
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* Other questions:
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Q. After upgrading my system recently, I noticed that some files from
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base-files do not match the ones which are installed on a fresh install
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of squeeze. Should I not be warned about that?
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A. Those files are configuration files, so they are completely under
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the control of the system admin. The files installed by base-files are
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just defaults. Changes in the default files are not important enough
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to warn the user, as it is also policy that prompting should be
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reduced to a minimum. This is also the reason they are not handled via
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dpkg's conffile mechanism.
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In either case, if you want to "upgrade" those files, just look at the
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postinst for base-files (i.e. /var/lib/dpkg/info/base-files.postinst)
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and you will see how they are created and where their master copies are:
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install_from_default /usr/share/base-files/dot.profile /root/.profile
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install_from_default /usr/share/base-files/dot.bashrc /root/.bashrc
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install_from_default /usr/share/base-files/profile /etc/profile
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install_from_default /usr/share/base-files/motd /etc/motd
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So, if you want your system to be as similar as possible to a newly
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installed squeeze system, you might want to sync these files manually.
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Note 1: Since base-files version 6.10, /etc/profile is automatically
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upgraded if it has not been modified from a previous default.
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Note 2: The file /etc/nsswitch.conf has been moved to libc-bin.
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Q. Why isn't license "foo" included in common-licenses?
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A. I delegate such decisions to the policy group. If you want to
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propose a new license you should make a policy proposal to modify the
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paragraph in policy saying "Packages distributed under the Apache
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license (version 2.0), the Artistic license, the GNU GPL (versions 1,
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2, or 3), the GNU LGPL (versions 2, 2.1, or 3), and the GNU FDL
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(versions 1.2 or 1.3) should refer to the corresponding files under
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/usr/share/common-licenses". The way of doing this is explained in the
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debian-policy package. As usual, you should always take a look at
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already reported bugs against debian-policy before submitting a new
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one.
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Q. I upgraded from woody to sarge. Should my system be FHS-compliant now?
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A. Achieving FHS compliance by upgrading would be tricky and prone to
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error in certain cases, so it is not a goal of base-files, nor it is
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planned to be. By default, some "mandatory" directories (like /opt,
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/srv or /media) are only created in the first install (performed by
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debootstrap), to keep the code as simple as possible, follow the
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principle of least surprise on upgrades, and also to give people the
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freedom to remove those directories without them being created again
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when base-files is upgraded. Therefore, if you are running any sort of
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compliance tests, you should do it on newly installed systems only.
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Santiago Vila <sanvila@debian.org>
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