I have uploaded Debian packages of 1.5.50 to Debian experimental. The 1.5.50 packages in Debian have disconnected mode and bos restrict capability enabled and include the binaries for the NFS translator, which should now work on Linux.
They are also built with the demand-attach file server, as I'm hoping that can be the default in Debian in the 1.6 release. I've not tested the packages; I literally just uploaded them once they would compile. Please do not use them in production. However, please test if it's possible for you to do so to help us iron out the remaining bugs, including any bugs I may have introduced in the Debian packaging of the new version. I'm particularly interested in the upgrade experience from current 1.4.7 packages for the file server and whether the Debian packages need to do anything additional to ease the upgrade. I know there are some binaries without man pages: W: openafs-fileserver: binary-without-manpage usr/sbin/fssync-debug W: openafs-fileserver: binary-without-manpage usr/sbin/salvsync-debug W: openafs-fileserver: binary-without-manpage usr/sbin/state_analyzer W: openafs-client: binary-without-manpage usr/sbin/rmtsysd This will be fixed before uploading this branch to unstable, but I haven't had a chance to start investigating and writing documentation yet. Similarly, README.Debian is not updated yet. -- Russ Allbery ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) <http://www.eyrie.org/~eagle/> _______________________________________________ OpenAFS-info mailing list [email protected] https://lists.openafs.org/mailman/listinfo/openafs-info
