Ubuntu 6.10, OpenSUSE 10.2 Rise to (and in Some Ways Above) Microsoft's Vista Challenge (eWeek)
Ubuntu 6.10, OpenSUSE 10.2 Rise to (and in Some Ways Above) Microsoft's Vista Challenge (eWeek)
Posted Jan 22, 2007 22:25 UTC (Mon) by hazelsct (guest, #3659)In reply to: Ubuntu 6.10, OpenSUSE 10.2 Rise to (and in Some Ways Above) Microsoft's Vista Challenge (eWeek) by bronson
Parent article: Ubuntu 6.10, OpenSUSE 10.2 Rise to (and in Some Ways Above) Microsoft's Vista Challenge (eWeek)
So please describe how upgrades without debconf -- which just set *all* of the config options to defaults regardless of their importance -- are better than what you've just described.
Furthermore, please describe how leaving old configuration files across an upgrade -- which might change the configuration file formats -- is better than having a tool like debconf automatically fill in the values you selected when you first installed the package.
There's an inherent tradeoff between "annoyingly chatty" and "defaults that break". Only Debconf allows you to select what you want in this range, and modify options on a package-by-package basis e.g. "dpkg-reconfigure --priority=low xserver-xorg". No other package configuration system exists anywhere, let alone comes close to debconf's configurability, usability, flexibility, and ubiquitous application across the package repository.
Summary: those who don't use debconf are asking for upgrade breakage due to file format changes or headaches involved in re-generating configuration files over and over again. Config questions may seem like a pain, but when they save the pain of re-editing a zillion files in /etc, they are well worth it.
