On Wed, 21 Nov 2001, kevin lyda wrote:
> On Wed, Nov 21, 2001 at 06:43:48PM +0000, Paul Jakma wrote:
> > grumble... been a pet peeve of mine for a long while..
>> oh god, you don't have to be wrong *all* the time. sheesh.
:)
> i actually run apps from the commandline (gnome-help-browser, galeon,
> soffice, xterm, gnome-terminal, xmms spring to mind right off the bat).
> i'd rather PATH would stay it's nice, readable single line.
>> face it, redhat and debian have pushed through a major advance over
> older unicies. decent package management. and that means that the
> piss-poor method of "package management" used by older unicies - aka
> the sacred directory concept - can be happily consigned to the scrap heap.
yep. i very much agree..
referring to first paragraph though. the reason to move big
collections of related software to their own subdir is precisey to
avoid PATH pollution.
if i ssh in to my desktop, i do not need 1700+ binaries available
through PATH, esp. furkin GNOME stuff.
anyway, whatever the arguments regarding package management, PATH and
ld.so.conf, the biggest reason it's "wrong" is that relying on a
system that on a normalish installation keeps 2k files in one ferkin
dir, with no upper limit (how big would /usr/bin/ be if you installed
everything on a RH install?) is not good.
it's just plain ferkin "wrong".
eg, try an ls -l of /usr/bin/ on a RH system on a slow connection.
bugger it, you'll be hitting ^C really quickly (and you'll wait due to
buffering).
there's a reason directories were invented...
> this is just my opinion of course...
well, imo the problem here is that you've got the direction of your
first sentence back to front mister kevin "for (;;) { select(..., ...,
..., ...., 0); }" lyda.
:)
> kevin
--paulj
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