On Sun, Jan 30, 2000 at 01:18:40AM -0600, Dan Potter wrote: : As far as I can tell, in Debian, everything that goes into /usr is : something installed by the system. Of course this includes most of the : useful parts of the operating system since Debian includes not one, not : ten, but at least twenty kitchen sinks at any given time; and system : components are just another one of those pieces that goes in with the : rest. So everything that is managed by the system goes into /usr. : /usr/local is reserved almost exclusively for things installed from : source. In FreeBSD, it seems like the only things that go into just /usr : are things that come from the FreeBSD source snapshots -- the kernel, and : all the system binaries. This is kind of a weird concept if you think of : it in terms of the standard Linux way, which is probably one reason I'm : being confused =). But I like having the seperation -- things in /usr are : managed by the system, things in /usr/local are managed only by me.
See, this makes no sense to me. Having worked on more than a fistfull of UNIX's, I still cannot fathom why Linux does it different from the rest. I also don't see why the main hierarchical tree (/, /usr, ...) should be polluted with code that doesn't come from and isn't maintained by the distributor. I'm just wacky I guess... 8) --Jerry name: Jerry Alexandratos || Open-Source software isn't a phone: 302.593.4322 || matter of life or death... email: [EMAIL PROTECTED] || ...It's much more important || than that!