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Date:      Thu, 11 Nov 1999 16:25:40 -0800
From:      Greg Shenaut <greg@bogslab.ucdavis.edu>
To:        stable@FreeBSD.ORG
Subject:   Re: ldconfig finding libraries, but ld is not. 
Message-ID:  <199911120025.QAA00809@deal1.bogs.org>
In-Reply-To: Your message of "Thu, 11 Nov 1999 15:14:04 PST." <14379.19900.963634.387520@guru.phone.net> 

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In message <14379.19900.963634.387520@guru.phone.net>, Mike Meyer cleopede:
>Ports (and packages) come on the CD-ROM that
>comes with my subscription to FreeBSD. I see complaints about ports
>failing to build or function properly regularly on a mail list
>@freebsd.org, and nobody complains that it's inappropriate. I won't
>argue that they are part of the OS - if you won't argue that they
>aren't part of the FreeBSD distribution (in fact, a major part as far
>as I'm concerned.)

I agree with all this, and I was shocked when I moved from BSD/OS
to FreeBSD that all the distributed software was placed into
/usr/local.  But the reality is that the FreeBSD folks consider
the stuff handled as "distributions" to be FreeBSD, and all the
other stuff (absolutely required, IMHO, in order to actually do
anything on the computer) to be optional local stuff, so it goes
into /usr/local.

After pouting for several months (which gave me a paintful cramp
in the jaw), I spent a couple of days moving what I considered
"local" (mostly stuff I've written or glommed over the years) into
a separate file hierarchy with a root name based on the name of
our lab, and now I don't have to worry about it (and my jaw feels
much better too).

-Greg Shenaut


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