Claudio Freire wrote:
I'm no expert on LSB, but I think you got that wrong. usr stands for Unix System Resources (not user as many assume, including myself a while back). What you're mentioning goes in /usr/local
Nep. /usr = short for /user... as separate from system. Not user owned, or local user added, but user applications. Even user home directories were (are?) placed under /usr (or a subdir of it). It was things you didn't need to boot, but did to do other tasks. None of the original unix commands or words were strictly acronyms with the possible exception of 'awk'...as I can't think of what word was shortened to create that name. None of those names came from LSB and none are captalized as in acronyms.. /usr/local is stuff added locally by usrs on that system. They were all created as short commands because the unix creators weren't great or fast typists and wanted short commands (seriously, I think it was Ritchie who documented that fact). A full spelled out list of commands -- they'd have wrote tl;dr. -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse-factory+unsubscribe@opensuse.org To contact the owner, e-mail: opensuse-factory+owner@opensuse.org