Op woensdag 3 januari 2007 17:40, schreef Andreas Hanke:
is it possible to explain, why this is done? What is the advantage of /usr or the disadvantage of /opt?
The /opt/gnome <-> /usr separation simply doesn't work. It worked reasonably in the past when GNOME was sort of self-contained, but today GNOME packages install a lot of files (mono libraries, python modules, dbus services, message catalogs...) that *must* live in /usr.
As kde is dependend on e.g. dbus as well, does that mean that in the future kde (kde4) will move to /usr as well? Op woensdag 3 januari 2007 18:26, schreef Stanislav Brabec:
Additionally installation of distribution packages to /opt: - Breaks LSB rules. Does the LSB forbid to install packages outside /usr. I thought that the LSB allows packages to be installed /opt, under certain conditions.
- Forces third parties to create many distribution specific RPM packages. The same is valid in think for kde (see above). Does this mean that kde(4) will be located in /usr in the future as well?
-- Richard Bos Without a home the journey is endless --------------------------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse-packaging+unsubscribe@opensuse.org For additional commands, e-mail: opensuse-packaging+help@opensuse.org