Here is what I do:

1) Untar the gap installation to a directory like /usr/local/lib/gap4r8

2) Build GAP and all packages in this directory (GAP and it’s packages does not 
like being moved), exactly as normal.

3) Either symlink, or copy, bin/gap.sh into a directory in the user’s path like 
/usr/local/bin

GAP should then run happily for any user who runs it.

The only problems arise if you want to try to separate different parts of GAP 
into different directories, which it currently doesn’t support well.

Chris



> On Oct 17, 2017, at 1:21 AM, Gordon Royle <gordon.ro...@uwa.edu.au> wrote:
> 
> Hi
> 
> I want to install the latest GAP on a Linux (RHEL) machine in such a way that 
> it is accessible to multiple users. (I have root permissions on that machine.)
> 
> I cannot seem to find instructions for this particular variant of the 
> installation process - the kinds of things I need to know are
> 
> - do I create a GAP directory in the shared areas (i.e. /usr/local/lib/gap4r8 
> or similar)
> - do I install all the packages in this shared area, or does each user 
> maintain their own package
> - would it be easier to just ask all users to install GAP for themselves 
> (well, this would obviously be easier for me!)
> 
> (The link on the main installation page that claims to be installation 
> documentation actually downloads a file called INSTALL.dms which I cannot 
> open )
> 
> Thanks
> 
> Gordon
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