Raul Miller <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes: > You don't get to call the FHS wrong without providing a rationale
Sure I do -- it's one of the benefits of living in the US of A. :-) But in any case, I'm not calling the FHS wrong, I'm calling the actual *use* of /opt wrong. FHS doesn't require that use (or I *would* be calling the FHS wrong), it merely allows it. And in any case, I meant wrong in the moral sense, not the legal sense. The rationale in the FHS says it's a well-established practice -- that doesn't prevent it from being wrong. In many parts of the world, wife-beating is still a well-established practice. :-) > Sure, well, if you can come up with something more convincing than the > FHS I'm willing to listen. Again, the FHS does not require these directories to exist, it merely allows it. In fact, looking more closely, while the FHS explicitly says that distributions may create /usr/local/bin and a handful of other dirs under /usr/local, it does *not* grant the same permission for /opt/bin and friends. All it says is that these directories are reserved for the local sysadmin and that packages may not depend on them. It *could* be argued that creating these dirs actually *violates* the FHS. I don't know if I'd go that far, but it *is* a possible interpretation, and might bear some consideration. cheers -- Chris Waters [EMAIL PROTECTED] | I have a truly elegant proof of the or [EMAIL PROTECTED] | above, but it is too long to fit into http://www.dsp.net/xtifr | this .signature file.