sysconftool man page on DragonFly

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SYSCONFTOOL(1)			  sysconftool			SYSCONFTOOL(1)

NAME
       sysconftool - install configuration files

SYNOPSIS
       sysconftool [options] [filename.dist...]

DESCRIPTION
       sysconftool is a development utility that helps to install application
       configuration files.  sysconftool allows an existing application to be
       upgraded without losing the older version's configuration settings.

       A new version of an application often introduces new configuration
       settings. Sometimes obsolete configuration settings are removed.
       Existing configuration settings may also now have additional options,
       or certain options are no longer valid any more. Because of this, an
       application upgrade usually installs a fresh set of configuration
       files, containing a default configuration that's known to work. Keeping
       the existing files carries the risk of the application failing to
       function properly due to a configuration that is no longer valid.

       A typical application installation script copies over configuration
       files with default settings. Existing configuration files are backed up
       or overwritten. With sysconftool, an application will install a
       configuration file names filename.dist, instead of filename. Then, the
       application's installation script runs sysconftool.  sysconftool copies
       filename.dist to filename, but also checks if filename from an older
       version of the application already exist. If filename an older
       sysconftool-installed configuration file, it's configuration settings
       replace the defaults in filename.dist, which is then subsequently
       installed as filename.  sysconftool is smart enough to:

       ·   Remove configuration settings that no longer exist.

       ·   Add new configuration settings.

       ·   Do not preserve an older configuration setting if there's a
	   possibility that it is no longer valid in the new version of the
	   application.

       sysconftool produces a short report when it runs. The report lists
       every configuration setting in $filename.dist, and its disposition. The
       possible dispositions are:

       new
	   This a new configuration setting that wasn't found in the existing
	   $filename.

       unchanged
	   This setting's value was taken from the existing $filename,
	   replacing the default value provided by $filename.dist.

       UPDATED
	   This setting has been previously set in $filename, but the
	   setting's value may no longer be valid in the new version of the
	   application, so its default value is taken from $filename.dist, and
	   it may need to be manually adjusted.

       All this logic is based on some additional metadata that must be
       included in each configuration file, that sysconftool reads. For this
       to work, both the old and the new version of the application must be
       sysconftool-ized.  sysconftool operates in a fail-safe mode. If the old
       version did not use sysconftool, $filename is backed up to
       $filename.bak, and $filename is copied to $filename. This is what would
       essentially happen anyway without sysconftool. The local configuration
       needs to be reentered into $filename, so nothing is lost. However, the
       next upgrade will see sysconftool do its job.

ADDING SYSCONFTOOL SUPPORT TO AN EXISTING APPLICATION
       sysconftool requires the application to use autoconf and automake. The
       first step is to run the sysconftoolize script from the application's
       source directory.  sysconftoolize creates a symbolic link to the
       sysconftool script from the current directory, and appends a default
       install-configure rule to Makefile.am.  sysconftoolize with the --copy
       option copies the script, instead of creating a symbolic link.

       After running sysconftoolize the macro AC_PROG_SYSCONFTOOL must be
       manually added to configure.in, and Makefile.am must be modified as
       follows.

       Makefile.am must be modified to install configuration files as
       filename.dist instead of filename. The default install-configure rule
       assumes that sysconf_DATA lists all configuration files in sysconfdir,
       and runs sysconftool on them. This will usually have to be modified,
       according to the application's individual needs. Finally, Makefile.am
       must be modified to distribute the sysconftool script in the
       application's source distribution. Adding sysconftool to EXTRA_DIST is
       what's needed in most cases.

       Finally, certain sysconftool magic incantations must be added to the
       application's configuration files, see sysconftool(7)[1] for more
       information. The last step involves updating the application's INSTALL
       instructions, so that the application can be properly installed. The
       following instructions must be added to INSTALL:

	1. Run "make install-configure" after "make install".

	2. If this is the first sysconftool-ized version, DO NOT simply copy
	   over the old configuration files, and overwrite the new
	   configuration files. Instead, manually edit each configuration
	   file, and manually reset each configuration setting. This is
	   because the new configuration files include the magic code for
	   sysconftool, which would be lost when the configuration file is
	   overwritten.

	3. If this is not the first sysconftool-ized version, the output of
	   make install-configure must be reviewed in order to manually adjust
	   or tweak what sysconftool did. Many large configuration files can
	   result in lots of output, so the output of make install-configure
	   should be saved into a file, and reviewed.

SEE ALSO
       sysconftoolcheck(1)[2], sysconftool(7)[1].

AUTHORS
       Double Precision, Inc.

NOTES
	1. sysconftool(7)
	   [set $man.base.url.for.relative.links]/sysconftool.7.html

	2. sysconftoolcheck(1)
	   [set $man.base.url.for.relative.links]/sysconftoolcheck.1.html

Courier Mail Server		  08/25/2013			SYSCONFTOOL(1)
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