On Sun, May 18, 2003 at 06:19:59PM +0200, Jérôme Marant wrote: > Sven Luther <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes: > > > >> Other linux distributions don't need to see -I flag and they > >> ship files in /usr/lib/ocaml/caml. This is also where the > >> ocaml tarball installs files (it can be /usr/local). > >> So, I'd like that we keep compatibility with other distributions. > > > > The /usr/include/caml symlink is there only for convenience. I can > > remove it if you feel like that, but /usr/include is the right place to > > put include files (says policy and such). > > Policy doesn't say you cannot install such files where there > are installed by default. > > The /usr/include/caml link is fine, but it must point to > headers files and /usr/lib/ocaml/3.06/caml is empty.
Mmm, my ocaml-3.06 package did that, i thought the ocaml package i uploaded did also, but apparently i didn't backport this fix. It will be fixed in my next uploaded package, don't worry. > No, GCC are compatible between each other and gcc is build essential. Well, there were incompatibilities between 2.95 and 3.2, at least for drm modules and X servers. > But there can be other compilers that GCC on the system. But not the debian built ocaml. Friendly, Sven Luther

