Hi all, If I were to unpack 5 different Koha plugins to /opt/koha-plugins and then added "<pluginsdir>/opt/koha-plugins</pluginsdir>" to the koha-conf.xml for all my Koha instances, I should be able to just run "koha-foreach perl /usr/share/koha/bin/devel/install_plugins.pl" to install/upgrade all those plugins within Koha, right? Once "bug 21366 - add plack reload" is done, we could then do "koha-plack --reload $(koha-list --enabled --plack)" to gracefully reload all those Koha instances to have the freshest version of the plugin. -- If that's true, a person could bundle Koha plugins however they like, right? They could put them into koha-common, they could do their own koha-plugins package (included or separate to their Koha codebase), they could just use a Git repo, or whatever makes sense for distributing. The advantage of Debian packages would be adding that "koha-foreach" and "koha-plack" into package install hooks. I suppose a "install plugins" hook in "koha-create" would be wise too so that a new instance could auto install any centralized plugins. Does that all make sense? Am I missing anything? I'd really like to use plugins in lieu of Koha customizations but I find distributing the code across a large number of Koha instances to be prohibitive. David Cook Senior Software Engineer Prosentient Systems Suite 7.03 6a Glen St Milsons Point NSW 2061 Australia Office: 02 9212 0899 Online: 02 8005 0595