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Date:      Thu, 27 Aug 1998 02:28:10 -0700 (PDT)
From:      asami@FreeBSD.org (Satoshi Asami)
To:        nik@iii.co.uk
Cc:        dillon@backplane.com, jkoshy@FreeBSD.org, bde@zeta.org.au, committers@hub.freebsd.org
Subject:   Re: cvs commit: src/etc make.conf
Message-ID:  <199808270928.CAA11841@silvia.hip.berkeley.edu>
In-Reply-To: <19980827102000.I6112@iii.co.uk> (nik@iii.co.uk)

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 * It's got nothing to do with ${PREFIX}, and I don't see where you got that
 * impression. The fact that (should something like this ever get 
 * implemented) ${PREFIX} and kern.local_config *might* happen to have the 
 * same value is completely irrelevant.

Excuse me?

 > I quite like the idea of making ${PREFIX} a system wide variable (perhaps
 > a sysctl?) that can be queried. Perhaps
 :

There is no one value for ${PREFIX} for ports, even on one system.
(It can be /usr/local, /usr/X11R6 or anything else, depending on the
port.)

 * The FreeBSD administrator could chose to set kern.local_config to
 * /usr/local/etc, /var/etc, /usr/host/etc (which is a scheme I've seen people
 * use when /usr/local was NFS mounted), /opt/etc, or whatever, completely
 * seperate from whatever value is in ${PREFIX}.

If you meant by above "making the place people store local
configuration files a system wide variable", then I agree.  (Although
I still don't understand why it can't be called /etc and be a symlink
to wherever you want.)

Anyway, it has gotten completely away from the original topic
(/etc/make.conf vs. /etc/make.conf.local) so I guess we should stop
here.

Satoshi



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