-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- On Tue, 24 Feb 1998, Christian Schwarz wrote:
> I agree that the policy should be clarified. In short: Symbolic links > _within_ a top level directory should be relative, symbolic links > _between_ top level directories should be absolute. > > Examples how things should be set up according to this policy: > /usr/X11R6/man/man1/foo.1x.gz -> > ../../../man/man7/undocumented.7.gz > (relative link) > > /usr/X11R6/lib/foo/data -> /var/lib/foo > (absolute link) Assuming of course that X11R6 isn't a symlink to something. My understanding was that what causes the destruction is attempting to go backwards over a symlink path that's only valid one way. What we need is a list of symlinkable directories that we're willing to support. All of the baselevel ones perhaps by default, but also /usr/local may actually be a pointer to someplace different (especially when /usr is RO), and sometimes I think also /usr/X11R6, for people that want to keep X files on a different partition from the rest of the system. If we're not going to support people who move things around in this fashion, it should probably be specified that way in policy. ============================================================================= Zed Pobre <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> | PGP key on servers, fingerprint on finger ============================================================================= -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: 5.0 Charset: noconv iQEVAwUBNPNlP9wPDK/EqFJbAQGJjAf/W4dwrcAsVjeKPKFqR3lpJsMZGf63EBUv La48X2QZiFg2Sdtey9QMVKNmnl29e+kAUfe8a268aunZVUYfFiZTg+sGvnp1V3hf bIC/HbOr5skHklIvvkSP97ZIFcLXHS+2h9PAcFWnwRQVraJcCZzz7qbAs2eLzAvR hyRql0vMMvy/U+v/YHUonJHkHx9IY6P9qMcUuY1JEo4qsB7QO6FMzaTu3XPwemAV 95IkbaEnyq4xMjDuw51SlGBOVB3Y83kowyZ8tjgYxWCHGB8KgLc3zZqk7YQadErr 6IBVEwrU/j8zb78Ue6XSsU/YL7OD5WuEoR6CPVS9nDVKLNn0FPi7aQ== =HTTh -----END PGP SIGNATURE-----