If you comment out (#) the "start on" line, it effectively disables the job while still making it available to start manually. This also ensures that dpkg still sees it on upgrades and your changes aren't overwritten. Not completely non-destructive, but it works.
If you comment out (#) the "start on" line, it effectively disables the job while still making it available to start manually. This also ensures that dpkg still sees it on upgrades and your changes aren't overwritten. Not completely non-destructive, but it works.