X-Git-Url: http://gitweb.michael.orlitzky.com/?p=mailshears.git;a=blobdiff_plain;f=mailshears.gemspec;h=6af744f0486d29ac836dec338591166f3445d705;hp=405eda0a12f97789366ecc9f8e96fa48e9b97fd4;hb=ea30b6a9eba0741c16f5fa434925011f8a7a237f;hpb=e0c30b7b676461c583a83ce8dc7f8112867bb0b3 diff --git a/mailshears.gemspec b/mailshears.gemspec index 405eda0..6af744f 100644 --- a/mailshears.gemspec +++ b/mailshears.gemspec @@ -7,13 +7,28 @@ Gem::Specification.new do |s| s.email = ['michael@orlitzky.com'] s.homepage = 'http://michael.orlitzky.com/code/mailshears.php' s.summary = 'Prune unused mail directories.' - s.description = s.summary - s.license = 'AGPL-3' + s.description = <<-EOF + Managing a mail system with virtual users is annoying. The + authoritative database of users is stored in one table, but every + other piece of software keeps its own database of users. + + If you're using PostfixAdmin to manage your users, what happens when + you delete a user? Chances are, nothing happens: mail directories are + left behind, webmail preferences are saved, address books become + orphaned. That's what mailshears was designed to fix. It cleans up + after you remove a user or domain. + Another stupidly difficult task is renaming a single email + account. It's easy to move the user in one database, but then all of + the remaining filesystem directories and databases need to be updated + as well. Since these two tasks are related, mailshears does them both. + EOF + + s.license = 'AGPL-3' s.required_rubygems_version = '>= 1.3.6' # If you have runtime dependencies, add them here - s.add_runtime_dependency 'pg', '>= 0.11.0' + s.add_runtime_dependency 'pg', '~> 0.11' # The list of files to be contained in the gem s.files = `git ls-files`.split("\n")