Date: Thu, 11 Nov 1999 21:41:27 -0800 (PST) From: Mike Meyer <mwm@phone.net> To: stable@FreeBSD.ORG Subject: Re: ldconfig finding libraries, but ld is not. Message-ID: <14379.43143.557210.577197@guru.phone.net> In-Reply-To: <199911120416.PAA29570@lightning.itga.com.au> References: <199911120416.PAA29570@lightning.itga.com.au>
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Gregory Bond writes: ;->> Yeah, I did that. /usr/local is on /usr, and /home has stuff that's ;->> local on it. It's just a minor annoyance (as opposed to, say, Windows ;->> UI behavior, which is a major annoyance). ;->This is an old, old, _OLD_ problem. I personally have been dealing with it ;->since the days of mod.sources. I even remember the wrenching sensation that ;->came from discovering that there were these very substantial, useful programs ;->out there and people _just gave them away_. The mind boggled. I'm old enough to have gone the other way - the first time I ran into programs that people treated like *property*, I boggled. I was used to software being either 1) something the hardware manufacturer gave you as part of the machine lease/purchase so it would be useful, or 2) something that was free. ;->For many years we have (on our Sun systems) had a /usr/local/{bin,lib,sbin,etc} ;->hierarchy for stuff from the net (etc) that isn't part of the OS, and /usr/ ;->local/<org>/{bin,lib,etc} for locally-developed stuff. It's a 3-way ;->distinction that has proved very useful. I never saw that one - stuff in /usr/local we put on after the base OS install, and generally had people on-site to look at and possible fix, whether we it was written locally or not. We did migrate things through /usr/local/new and /usr/local/old if it looked like there were incompatabilities. <mike To Unsubscribe: send mail to majordomo@FreeBSD.org with "unsubscribe freebsd-stable" in the body of the message
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