On Thu, Jul 24, 2014 at 12:24 AM, roys2005 <roys2...@gmail.com> wrote: > I am trying to find out how I can install Python on a central machine > so that all users can use it, rather than using /usr/local/bin/python. > ( I am talking about unix/linux platform ) > > Since, I do not know the answer, I was asking if Python > can/can't/should/shouldn't be installed on a central machine.
Firstly, I would *strongly* recommend keeping /usr/bin/python (or /usr/local/bin/python, whatever `which python` says) exactly where it is. Call that one the "system Python", and treat it like bash, grep, and all those other important tools. You'll only mess up your system if you mess with that. But with that sorted: I don't see any particular problem with mounting some remote drive and running Python from it. You'll probably need to make sure the path to it is the same as it was on the system that installed it, and you'll definitely want to do this only on systems with the same architecture, but otherwise you should be fine. Make yourself a /usr/central/bin/python or something, install Python into it, and then make /usr/central on all the others as a mount point for /usr/central on the one where you installed it. And then you can come back and tell us all how it went, because most of us will have never tried it :) ChrisA -- https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list