* Tollef Fog Heen > No. If you have exim4 installed and install mailman, it's a > reasonable expectation that you want to use those two together.
But you cannot know if I have changed, added, or removed files under conf.d/ in such a way which would make your drop-in routers and transports break the entire configuration. The files are after all configuration the user is allowed to change as he pleases. Policy 10.7.3 says: Configuration file handling must conform to the following behavior: * local changes must be preserved during a package upgrade, [..] Even though you're not strictly changing _a_ configuration file by dropping files under conf.d, you're changing the configuration that Exim ends up reading. I've always felt that the general principle that requirement is there for is something like "the user should be able to trust us not to fuck around with his custom configuration behind his back". And unless you ensure that the snippets belonging to exim4-config isn't changed [in a significant way], you certainly will violate that principle. > It will be documented in NEWS.Debian ifwhen I get around to it. As far as I know NEWS.Debian is only displayed on upgrades, so that isn't sufficient. That said, documenting that you're doing something undesireable isn't really an excuse for doing it in the first place. Please consider putting the snippets somewhere else, like under /etc/mailman/, and rather tell the user where to symlink them under /etc/exim4/conf.d/. -- Tore Anderson -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]