2009/9/3 johnf <email address hidden>:
> I think having it disabled by default, where enabling it is as simple as editing /etc/default/bzr is an acceptable alternative.
I think you want to be pretty careful that people understand it will
make the relevant directory world-readable, unless limited. But aside
from that, it does seem reasonably consistent with debian practice.
2009/9/3 johnf <email address hidden>:
> I think having it disabled by default, where enabling it is as simple as editing /etc/default/bzr is an acceptable alternative.
I think you want to be pretty careful that people understand it will
make the relevant directory world-readable, unless limited. But aside
from that, it does seem reasonably consistent with debian practice.
-- launchpad. net/~mbp/>
Martin <http://