etckeeper 0.61ubuntu1 source package in Ubuntu

Changelog

etckeeper (0.61ubuntu1) precise; urgency=low

  [Chuck Short]
  * Merge from Debian testing.  Remaining changes:
   - etckeeper.conf, debian/control: default to bzr.
   - etckeeper.spec: Change version to match Ubuntu version
   - commit.d/50vcs-commit: Avoid failure in initial commit if etckeeper
     is not installed from a tty (like early during installation)
   - debian/control: Added dependency on hostname.
   - etckeeper: Ensure that LANG is set, default to UTF8, necessary for
     bzr to function properly in non-interactive shells (eg, cron); user's
     local LANG will override if set.

etckeeper (0.61) unstable; urgency=low

  * Fix up botched git-rm conffile removal from 0.58.
    The file could be in any of three states; absent, present, or .dpkg-dist.
    Finish fully removing it. Closes: #655836

etckeeper (0.60) unstable; urgency=low

  * Updated Dutch translation of debconf templates. Closes: #654244
  * Support -h and --help. Closes: #654188
  * Fix typo in bugfix for #651168.
  * Improve yum hook to avoid running if etckeeper was just removed.
    Thanks, Mykola Marzhan
 -- Chuck Short <email address hidden>   Mon, 06 Feb 2012 07:49:28 -0500

Upload details

Uploaded by:
Chuck Short
Uploaded to:
Precise
Original maintainer:
Ubuntu Developers
Architectures:
all
Section:
admin
Urgency:
Low Urgency

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Builds

Precise: [FULLYBUILT] i386

Downloads

File Size SHA-256 Checksum
etckeeper_0.61ubuntu1.tar.gz 46.0 KiB abdbd14dd2ee5b54ff3d5a3e3fa1ce57a017640748767eab74b056646753a645
etckeeper_0.61ubuntu1.dsc 1002 bytes 5df01815868c9d7b3aa710c7f7159623f483aba984908d9164bd4c96c30c4283

Available diffs

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Binary packages built by this source

etckeeper: store /etc in git, mercurial, bzr or darcs

 The etckeeper program is a tool to let /etc be stored in a git, mercurial,
 bzr or darcs repository. It hooks into APT to automatically commit changes
 made to /etc during package upgrades. It tracks file metadata that version
 control systems do not normally support, but that is important for /etc, such
 as the permissions of /etc/shadow. It's quite modular and configurable, while
 also being simple to use if you understand the basics of working with version
 control.