Sean Kendall Schneyer wrote: > > Andreas Pour wrote: > > > > Sean Kendall Schneyer wrote: > > > > > I'm sorry I came off the wrong way. The problem was that I didn't > > > have a position to begin with really :o) What happened was that > > > I reacted to the fact that I thought you were saying that we > > > shouldn't follow the FHS... and then the only reason that you > > > seemed to give at the time was that we didn't fit into the > > > "normal" package space. I wasn't trying to be rude in anyway > > > and wasn't even saying that you were wrong, all I wanted was > > > a concrete reason why we should _not_ follow the FHS since it > > > was a standard. Nobody was able to give me a good reason so > > > I finally pulled up the standard for myself to see why it would > > > be so hard to follow for us... after reading it I can now see > > > that we ARE (almost) following the standard. The only thing > > > that we lack to conform to the standard is an $KDEDIR/man > > > directory (as specified in section 3.8). > > > > Is that right? As has been pointed out the /opt directory is reserved for > > "add-ons". As Preston pointed out some while ago, a package is not an "add-ln" if > > it is part of a distribution. Since KDE is now included in virtually every > > distribution, it really is wrong to think of it as an add-on -- instead, it is an > > integral component of every Linux system ( :-))) ). So, I think RedHat has it > > right on this one, it should go under /usr, not /opt, if you want to comply with > > FHS. > > > Actually, what Preston said was that if you get it from the > vendor that packaged your system (RedHat in this case) then it should > go under /usr. But if you got it from any other source it should > go under /opt or /usr/local. > > His original response can be found at: > http://lists.kde.org/?l=kde&m=92630941317386&w=2 > I think, /opt is dead for binary packages of KDE. It doesn't make sense. /usr is the way to go for any distribution, but that's not our main goal - there is only one goal for me - making it easy for distributions to change the locations. The only remaining question for KDE and this list is the hierarchy below /usr/local - do we want a /usr/local/kde or do we want to share /usr/local/bin with other programs. The later is definitly what I prefer. Greetings, Stephan -- Und sie nannten ihn, wie er selbst unterschrieb - Den Trojanischen Pferdedieb