"J.H.M. Dassen (Ray)" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes: > On Tue, Sep 21, 1999 at 20:23:00 -0700, Daniel Quinlan wrote: > > The primary reason distributions are permitted to install software in > > /opt is that some commercial software may come hard-coded that way. > > Given the DFSG, that should never apply to Debian. > > Not to Debian proper ("main"), but it could well affect the maintainers of > some of the packages available in the "non-free" section of the Debian > archives for which no source is available (say Netscape or Acroread).
IMO if a package of this type provides a worthwhile installer of it's own that puts the software into /opt, and actually works with Debian, we shouldn't bother with a debian package for it --- just point people at the upstream package. If there's enough demand, perhaps mirroring the upstream, and/or perhaps working out a way for apt-get to grab it for the user might be nice. If the upstream doesn't install cleanly on debian, I still don't think that any debian package should touch /opt. Otherwise, what happens when the upstream gets their installer sorted out properly, and a use downloads and installs it into /opt overwriting the files that dpkg thought belonged to the debianized version? Cheers, Phil.