Re: Filesystem Hierarchy Standard 2.0

1997-11-12 Thread Daniel Quinlan
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE- David Frey [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes: This means, that /usr/share can be shared among architectures (Debian GNU/Linux), where /usr/bin/... is shared among machines with the same architecture (i.e. Debian GNU/Linux on i386 NFS mount /usr/i386/bin, Debian

Backspace and delete

1997-11-12 Thread Ian Jackson
Some time ago I posted the message below to debian-devel. It received widespread support and no significant opposition. I think it should be made policy. If it is made policy we can go and report bugs against all the programs that fail to implement it, and then hopefully for 2.0 we'll have

Re: Filesystem Hierarchy Standard 2.0 (fwd)

1997-11-12 Thread Brian White
I missed the original bit of this thread, so I have to ask... Does the FHS address both local and mounted directories? To explain... There are, as I see it, 3 general file-storage locations other than the standard / and /usr systems. - files local to this machine (not network mounted) -

bash should not be essential

1997-11-12 Thread Santiago Vila Doncel
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE- Ian Jackson wrote: If you want to change the policy and say that bash shouldn't be essential then please come to debian-policy and we'll talk about it. I want to change the policy. I think bash should not be essential. It might be worth considering how many

Re: Filesystem Hierarchy Standard 2.0 (fwd)

1997-11-12 Thread Ian Jackson
Bdale writes: [lots of stuff] I haven't thought this all the way through, and don't have time to do so for another week or three, but my experience is that when we try to soften transitions like this (where we means the software community in general), we generate just as much frustration as