-- Rob McAninch robmcaninch.com (Sent from my iPhone)
On Mar 22, 2017, at 23:53, Robert Moskowitz <rgm@htt-consult.com> wrote:
On 03/22/2017 09:16 PM, Rob McAninch wrote:
On Mar 22, 2017, at 18:25, Robert Moskowitz <rgm@htt-consult.com> wrote:
On 03/22/2017 11:36 AM, chaouche yacine wrote: Robert,
What would be the benefit of using sed against making customized files and just copying them ? I'd probably just want to copy a working version of /etc/dovecot/ conf files instead of modifying my existing files with sed scripts (or create new ones with cat). new options are left unaltered. I learned this with postfix, to use postconf instead of trying to replace main.cf.
I thought about mv old confs then cat new confs, but again, there are other things set up, and I worked at changing what needed customization, rather than wholesale replacement. Did you consider putting your customization in a local.conf which should be tried at the end? Could put whatever explanation in there you want. On a system like Debian this would more easily allow the default files to be upgraded without intervention.
I have not seen any reference to a local.conf. Can you point this out to me? I will have to see that it is maintained in Centos. But some of the mods are additions (like plugins) to existing lines. I would have to find out how those are processed.
It is mentioned here http://wiki.dovecot.org/ConfigFile
Debian Jessie has the last line of dovecot.conf as:
!include_try local.conf
-- Rob