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Date:      Thu, 15 Feb 1996 23:09:36 -0800
From:      "Jordan K. Hubbard" <jkh@time.cdrom.com>
To:        Lyndon Nerenberg VE7TCP <lyndon@orthanc.com>
Cc:        freebsd-current@FreeBSD.ORG
Subject:   Re: Hysterical Raisons 
Message-ID:  <431.824454576@time.cdrom.com>
In-Reply-To: Your message of "Thu, 15 Feb 1996 19:32:32 PST." <199602160332.TAA00541@multivac.orthanc.com> 

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> If we're going to mandate a hierarchy convention for /usr/local
> it's going to be pretty tough to exempt /usr/ports from that, isn't
> it?

Uh, I think it's the other way around.  If you took a straw poll of
FreeBSD systems everywhere, I think you'd find that at least 90% of
them populated their /usr/local directories almost *exclusively* from
the ports collection.

With 387 ports currently in the ports collection, 68% of which install
into /usr/local (another 31% go into /usr/X11R6 which, interestingly
enough, leaves 1% unaccounted for :), the impact on that directory by
the ports collection should not be underestimated.  To put it another
way, I think that whatever policy is adopted by *the ports collection*
will become the defacto policy for /usr/local (and perhaps even
/usr/X11R6 someday, after the number of ports tops 1000 :-).

So basically, if Satoshi buys off on a hier(7) style structure for
/usr/local and starts beating ports (or their authors :) into
conformance, it'll happen.

					Jordan



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