Dear all! On Mit, 12 Jan 2005, Nick Phillips wrote: > > > .../bin/<arch>-<os>/ > > No, this is a violation of the FHS, which is included by reference in Debian > > policy. You would, at a minimum, have to use /usr/lib instead of > > /usr/share. > > But wasn't what he's trying to do the original purpose of /usr/share > anyway? (I don't mean in a Debian context, I mean in a general *nix > context)
Yup. That was my intention. And, btw the clients are NOT ONLY debian systems, but windows, apple, ... > It's been so long since I've seen anyone bother to do things that way > that I can't remember exactly... We have diskless clients here, and probably we are not the only ones. Our diskless clients run debian, so we could install tetex packages. But we share the TeXlive tree (which is BIG) via NFS and use it on the server, all the diskless clients, and additionally on a windows machine. > > Even in that case, I don't think it's very consistent with Debian design > > philosophy to have a monolithic package including binaries for other > > architectures, which seems to be your intent. It certainly wouldn't be > > eligible for inclusion in Debian main in such a form. > > That would be more the point, I think. In fact we would have packages for every architecture tl-dvips-bin-<arch> which is available for ALL architectures and install into texlive/bin/arch-os/... and a package tl-dvips-bin with debian-way of architecture, which depends on the right package for each arch (ie tl-dvips-bin for i386 depends on tl-dvips-bin-i386-linux eg) and just provides the right links. This way a user installs tl-dvips-bin, which pulls the right binaries. And those admins who need other binaries for sharing could get the packages for other architectures. > the packages to all the different machines. With modern disks and > package management systems, the usefulness is usually rather diminished. NO no no no. Noise Noise Noise is the word. None of our staff will ever again accept a computer with a hard disk, a CPU fan and a graphics card fan. They want absolut (well more or less) silence, and we don't have the money for this glissy shiny stuff that makes more or less silence with normal pc. Bottom line: I still think that it would be a good idea to be able to install different architectures within debian. Has this never been discussed before??? Best wishes Norbert ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Norbert Preining <preining AT logic DOT at> Technische Universität Wien sip:[EMAIL PROTECTED] +43 (0) 59966-690018 gpg DSA: 0x09C5B094 fp: 14DF 2E6C 0307 BE6D AD76 A9C0 D2BF 4AA3 09C5 B094 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- CRAIL (n. mineral) Crail is a common kind of rock or gravel found widely across the British Isles. Each individual stone (due to an as yet undiscovered gravitational property) is charged with 'negative buoyancy'. This means that no matter how much crail you remove from the garden, more of it will rise to the surface. Crail is much employed by the Royal Navy for making the paperweights and ashtrays used inside submarines. --- Douglas Adams, The Meaning of Liff -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]