> FHS assumes that every program works from the shell. Hurd servers > don't really work from the shell.
Noone starts init on the shell, and it is in /sbin. > What the FHS calls "binaries" are only some executables on the Hurd; > we have other executables that don't work like FHS "binaries", gotcha? Sincerely, I'm not sure I see why it is needed to make a difference. I may ask the question from a different point of view: does it harm to respect FHS and put what is in /hurd in /sbin and /usr/sbin? Curiously, Nowhere man -- [EMAIL PROTECTED] OpenPGP 0xD9D50D8A
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