Many thanks for the clarification.
Now I (kind of) understand the difference :)
[Resending again due to forgotten list-reply; will use the following
command to reduce the probability of this happening again:
$ printf 'bind index r list-reply\nbind index L reply\n' >> ~/.muttrc]
On Sun, Aug 14, 2016 at 01:36:08PM +0200, Laurent Bercot wrote:
> Not quite: if a bundle was a no-op oneshot, you could still have all
> its dependencies up while the bundle itself would be down. It wouldn't be
> a strict equivalence, but a container of sorts - a bit like "metapackages"
> for some distributions, that you can remove once they have installed all
> their contents.
>
> That's not what I was going after with bundles. A bundle is really an
> alias for a set of services, instead of one service that may or may not
> pull in others via the dependency mechanism.
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Received on Sun Aug 14 2016 - 12:03:00 UTC