On Wed, Sep 15, 1999 at 02:43:59PM +0200, Marek Habersack wrote: > * Steve Lamb said: > > Tuesday, September 14, 1999, 2:39:46 PM, Jonathan wrote: > > >> Tuesday, September 14, 1999, 3:14:37 PM, Federico wrote: > > >> > IMHO, /usr is what we (Debian) control, /usr/local is what I (the > > >> > sysadmin) control, /opt is where third-party package builders (e.g., > > >> > Corel, KDE, Cygnus, etc...) control. > > >> None of this describes one bit why it has to be a top level > > >> directory. > > > Because it fits the Unix tradition of lazy typists. Im a lazy typist. > > > Hear my carpal tunnel fingers cry out as they type the extra 4 > > > characters in /usr/opt > > Then why /home/ftp instead of /ftp? Why /var/htdocs instead of /www? > Because ftp is a USER and user's home belongs in /home. /var/www (NOT > /var/htdocs, btw) because the home page is varying data, not a static one. > Makes sense to you? Probably not, but it does for me.
Oh, I get it now. So if it is a *user* then we clearly place it in home. So... Where's /home/qmail? /home/games anyone? /home/news? /home/uucp? Wait, wait, according to you, all the man pages clearly belong in /usr/man! Oh, rats, what happened to /home/www-data? /home/majordomo? /home/msql? /home/irc? /home/gnats? /home/root? /home/mail! /home/list! Wow, Marek, Debian sure placed all of those USER's home in /home. I'm so glad you cleared that up. What does varying data have to do with anything about the placement of top-level directories based on a whim? I mean, already /var/www is wrong because it is a *USER* and should be placed in /home with the other varying data, like /home/ftp is. -- Steve C. Lamb | I'm your priest, I'm your shrink, I'm your ICQ: 5107343 | main connection to the switchboard of souls. -------------------------------+---------------------------------------------