diff options
Diffstat (limited to 'debian/prerm')
-rw-r--r-- | debian/prerm | 71 |
1 files changed, 0 insertions, 71 deletions
diff --git a/debian/prerm b/debian/prerm deleted file mode 100644 index e6adae87..00000000 --- a/debian/prerm +++ /dev/null @@ -1,71 +0,0 @@ -#!/bin/sh - -# Abort if any command returns an error value -set -e - -# This script is called as the first step in removing the package from -# the system. This includes cases where the user explicitly asked for -# the package to be removed, upgrade, automatic removal due to conflicts, -# and deconfiguration due to temporary removal of a depended-on package. - -# Info files should be uninstalled from the dir file in any case. -install-info --quiet --remove hurd - -# Because we run this in almost all cases, we do it here instead below. - -if [ "$1" != "upgrade" ]; then - update-alternatives --remove runsystem /libexec/runsystem.gnu -fi - -case "$1" in - remove) - # This package about to be removed. - : - - # There are two sub-cases: - if test "${2+set}" = set; then - if test "$2" != in-favour; then - echo "$0: undocumented call to \`prerm $*'" 1>&2 - exit 0 - fi - # We are being removed because of a conflict with package $3 - # (version $4), which is now being installed. - : - - else - # The package is being removed in its own right. - : - - fi - - - ;; - - deconfigure) - if test "$2" != in-favour -o "$5" != removing; then - echo "$0: undocumented call to \`prerm $*'" 1>&2 - exit 0 - fi - # Package $6 (version $7) which we depend on is being removed due - # to a conflict with package $3 (version $4), and this package is - # being deconfigured until $6 can be reinstalled. - : - - ;; - upgrade) - # Prepare to upgrade FROM THIS VERSION of this package to version $2. - : - - ;; - failed-upgrade) - # Prepare to upgrade from version $2 of this package TO THIS VERSION. - # This is only used if the old version's prerm couldn't handle it, - # and returned non-zero. (Fix old prerm bugs here.) - : - - ;; - *) echo "$0: didn't understand being called with \`$1'" 1>&2 - exit 0;; -esac - -exit 0 |