In the forum one guy said you should use the package management *or* the integrated updater, which makes sense I think. What if you use the integrated update tool to update to a complete new version and then a security update comes in via package management and overwrites some setting or something like this.
I am not sure if this will work so well.
Is there a way that the package management recognises that there is a new version installed by the application itself?
I think users that want the newest version load from azureus.sf.net and there works the integrated update, and the normal user does not need the integrated updater imo.
In the forum one guy said you should use the package management *or* the integrated updater, which makes sense I think. What if you use the integrated update tool to update to a complete new version and then a security update comes in via package management and overwrites some setting or something like this.
I am not sure if this will work so well.
Is there a way that the package management recognises that there is a new version installed by the application itself?
I think users that want the newest version load from azureus.sf.net and there works the integrated update, and the normal user does not need the integrated updater imo.