BTW: In production HPC environments similar configurations are deployed,
I've done so in a few different installations (plus a few other neat hacks
for usability).

I don't see why someone that installs lmod by choice wouldn't want them.
I've just been conservative w.r.t. automatically setting lmod up for the
user.

Aaron

On Mon, Nov 21, 2016 at 4:39 AM, Aaron Zauner <a...@azet.org> wrote:

> Sorry for the late reply.
>
> Thanks for working on this. I'm fine with the changes you've made. Haven't
> tested to be honest as I had limited time since you've worked on these
> changes to do so.
>
> Again thanks for updating,
> Aaron
>
> On Fri, Nov 11, 2016 at 11:57 PM, Ana Guerrero Lopez <a...@debian.org>
> wrote:
>
>> Control: tags 793355 + patch
>> Control: tags 793355 + pending
>>
>> Dear maintainer,
>>
>> I've prepared an NMU for lmod (versioned as 6.6-0.1) and uploaded it
>> to DELAYED/10. This means in 10 days my package will be automatically
>> uploaded to the archive unless you upload a package yourself or
>> ask me to remove the package from the delayed queue.
>>
>> I'm doing the NMU because it would be a pity to release Stretch with an
>> old version of lmod. Since you're maintaining the package in github,
>> I forked your repository and you can see easily my changes at:
>> https://github.com/ana/lmod-deb
>>
>> Please, take a look, some of my changes are quite intrusive since I
>> made some changes to have lmod behaving like environment-modules:
>> - MODULEPATH can be set in a file /etc/lmod/modulespath
>> - added /etc/profile.d/lmod.sh so /usr/share/lmod/lmod/init/$SHELL
>> is automatically run.
>>
>> Best regards,
>> Ana
>>
>
>

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