On 10/05/07, Forest Bond <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > On Wed, May 09, 2007 at 07:03:30PM -0400, Jim Doherty wrote: > > Sorry, I have no idea what ubuntu policy is. But good defensive > > scripting practice includes setting your $PATH to something safe. A > > good script should always not trust the environment it was handed along > > with many other things that people don't always do. > > I have to disagree. The environment is precisely the tool available to users > to > change the behavior of your script externally. It's not nice to stomp on user > preferences. > > The original problem is user error. Installing an upgraded perl in /usr/local > without installing all of the needed perl libraries or removing /usr/local/bin > from the default system PATH is incorrect usage. Don't break features to > avoid > user error, please.
You have 2 assertions in one sentence, I'm splitting them up. 1 - "Installing an upgraded perl in /usr/local without installing all of the needed perl libraries is incorrect usage" This directly contradicts the debian policy I quoted which essentially says that the contents of /usr/local should have no impact on whether your system works or not. I know Debian is not Ubuntu but in the absence of Ubuntu policy docs, I'm assuming that the Debian policy is a sane starting point. What you are basically saying is that whenever I install _anything_ into /usr/local/bin I should carefully check that no system scripts will be upset by this. I also need to check that no system scripts in the _future_ will be upset by this! Also, if I install my own perl in /usr/local/bin, I must install all the libraries used by any other package that might be installed by Ubuntu but I must do this by hand because apt will only manage the dependencies of my /usr/bin/perl . This basically makes it impractical to put anything into /usr/local/bin. You are also implying that everything in /usr/bin that start with #! /usr/bin/{perl,python,...} is wrong and should actually start with #! {perl,python,...} in order to pick up whatever version of {perl,python,...} the user prefers. In summary, you are saying that anything I put in /usr/local/bin should be such that I could safely put it into /usr/bin. So what's the point of /usr/local? 2 - "Installing an upgraded perl in /usr/local without removing /usr/local/bin from the default system PATH is incorrect usage" Users should not have to modify 20 scripts in /etc/ just because they've put something in /usr/local/bin, F > -Forest > > -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- > Version: GnuPG v1.4.6 (GNU/Linux) > > iD8DBQFGQxgHRO4fQQdv5AwRAihpAJ9Xt+Taa2NQLDPwp6q/1Ieo1zgVgwCgiuAL > tt0Y02QX+zHj7Bvuw/9wcNA= > =qnXL > -----END PGP SIGNATURE----- > > -- Ubuntu-devel-discuss mailing list Ubuntu-devel-discuss@lists.ubuntu.com Modify settings or unsubscribe at: https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-devel-discuss