I just migrated over to Ubuntu 16.10 from Debian Testing and modified the sudoers file, but there doesn't appear to be a 'sudo' service that I can restart to get it to recognize the changes.
Does this involve some SystemD magic?
I just migrated over to Ubuntu 16.10 from Debian Testing and modified the sudoers file, but there doesn't appear to be a 'sudo' service that I can restart to get it to recognize the changes.
Does this involve some SystemD magic?
So why is Xubuntu the only one that has a strategy document? Why is there not one for Ubuntu, Ubuntu Server, Kubuntu, etc..? Does this mean that Xubuntu is the only one thinking about these things?
I just started reading the Ubuntu Architecture wiki which outlines the overall architecture of Ubuntu. Got to the section that discusses the Ubuntu Policy Manual and that it is derived from the Debian Policy Manual.
I noticed that at the bottom of the Ubuntu Policy Manual that the document has not been changed since 2009-06-19. I also noticed the Debian Policy Manual was last updated on 2011-04-07.
Could be that no changes were necessary, but given the tight symbiosis between Ubuntu and Debian I would expect a more recent change date for the Ubuntu Policy Manual.
It could be that there just was no reason to update the document in over two years, but I am looking to better understand why?