Russ Allbery writes ("Re: dkms needs a pre-depends entry (Policy 3.5)"): > Bernd Zeimetz <be...@bzed.de> writes: > > Lets remove all triggers from dpkg then. > > For things that have to run to make the package usable, yes.
No. > I prefer packages to work after they've been configured. Otherwise, > Depends doesn't do what it's supposed to do. Packages which are awaiting trigger processing are not "configured"[1] and do not satisfy dependencies. Triggers-supporting tools (which includes those in lenny) always try to process triggers just as hard as they try to do other configuration steps. >From the triggers spec: Status Pending Awaited Satisfies Remedy triggers triggers Depends unpacked never maybe No postinst configure c.-failed never maybe No postinst configure (when requested) t.-awaited yes always No postinst triggered + fix awaited pkg(s) t.-awaited no always No fix awaited package(s) t.-pending always never Yes postinst triggered installed never never Yes n/a > Triggers are great for things that aren't required for the package > to function (updating the man database, updating the doc-base index, > registering newly-installed fonts with other subsystems), but if an > action is required for basic package functionality, I don't think > you can safely use triggers. I intended to allow you to safely use triggers even for those cases. (Obviously not for the essential functionality of an Essential package, but that has to be always available anyway.) > > Also adding update-python-modules -p to a postinst script does not hurt, > > even when dependencies change. I'm not sure I understand the Python situation well enough to give an opinion about it. Ian. [1] Well, strictly "configured" isn't a term with a well-defined meaning for dpkg, but loosely we mean "configured" to mean "not just unpacked, half-configured, or some other state that involves the files being on the system but the package not working" . A package awaiting trigger processing (that is, a triggering package which has activated a trigger in some other package but the other package's postinst hasn't been run to deal with it yet) are not in state "installed", even though its own postinst has completed. The _triggered_ package may satisfy dependencies, but that makes sense. If a python addon module triggers python, then the module is not working properly until the python trigger has been dealt with, but the rest of python is. -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to debian-devel-requ...@lists.debian.org with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact listmas...@lists.debian.org Archive: http://lists.debian.org/19525.59242.441242.945...@chiark.greenend.org.uk