Hello, here are some thoughts about an uninstall enhancement. If you supply it as an option to install.py (e.g. --create-uninstall), you can not be sure that the user always turns this option on. Suppose he ran the install command without --create-uninstall and some files got installed. Now he runs it again, but with --create-uninstall. The result is that no new files will be copied and the file list of (newly) installed files is empty. So your package list of installed files is empty and therefore incorrect. Solution: either you turn on self.force or you dont supply an option and write the package list every time you run the install command. I like the second solution more. A second problem with installation of Debian packages: I can install everything in `pwd`/debian/tmp with --home or supply my own install directories. But then the uninstall information is incorrect. When the Debian package gets installed the package files are still pointing to `pwd`/debian/tmp. This is the point where my --destdir=<destpath> option kicks in. The destpath prefix gets stripped off the package file list. If I run "./setup.py install --destdir=`pwd`/debian/tmp" a file installed as "`pwd`/debian/tmp/usr/lib/python1.5/foo.py" is listed in the package file list as "/usr/lib/python1.5/foo.py". Greetings, Bastian