Ola Lundqvist <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes: > I do not really see a problem here. All gnustep packages store > files in a (at least sort of) FHS compliant directory: > /usr/lib/GNUstep
Are the files stored there only object files, libraries and internal binaries not intended to be executed directly by users? [This is quoted From the FHS] > It is not very different from perl, python, emacs, java (and more) packages > that have a "filesystem" of it's own and managed there. Listing Perl, Python and Emacs here is totally wrong (and I don't know enough about Java packaging to speak about it). Perl is the best example: Architecture-dependend data is stored in /usr/lib/perl{/,5/}, arch-indep data in /usr/share/perl. Perl scripts that are intended to be used directly go to {/usr,}/bin. There's not a "filesystem" in /usr/lib/perl, only a tree of modules. > The only thing that can be argued is that the name maybe should be > without capital letters, but I do not think that is very important. NACK. GNUstep is not FHS-compliant and really should be fixed. [Please stop the top-posting and quote properly. Thanks.] Marc -- BOFH #177: sticktion
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