#!/bin/sh set -e # Note that metastore doesn't check that the .metastore file only changes # perms of files in the current directory. It's ok to trust the .metastore # file won't do anything shady, because, as documented, etckeeper-init # should only be run on repositories you trust. if [ -e .metadata ]; then if which metastore >/dev/null; then metastore --apply --mtime else echo "etckeeper warning: legacy .metastore file is present but metastore is not installed" >&2 fi fi