From owner-freebsd-ports Mon Apr 15 19:34:59 1996 Return-Path: owner-ports Received: (from root@localhost) by freefall.freebsd.org (8.7.3/8.7.3) id TAA29025 for ports-outgoing; Mon, 15 Apr 1996 19:34:59 -0700 (PDT) Received: from forgery.CS.Berkeley.EDU (forgery.CS.Berkeley.EDU [128.32.33.75]) by freefall.freebsd.org (8.7.3/8.7.3) with SMTP id TAA29016 for ; Mon, 15 Apr 1996 19:34:56 -0700 (PDT) Received: (from asami@localhost) by forgery.CS.Berkeley.EDU (8.6.11/8.6.9) id TAA21602; Mon, 15 Apr 1996 19:34:14 -0700 Date: Mon, 15 Apr 1996 19:34:14 -0700 Message-Id: <199604160234.TAA21602@forgery.CS.Berkeley.EDU> To: deischen@iworks.InterWorks.org CC: ports@FreeBSD.org In-reply-to: <9604160156.AA11963@iworks.InterWorks.org> (deischen@iworks.InterWorks.org) Subject: Re: plan statically linked? From: asami@cs.berkeley.edu (Satoshi Asami) Sender: owner-ports@FreeBSD.org X-Loop: FreeBSD.org Precedence: bulk * OK, plan includes the following: * * binaries: plan, netplan (netwwork server), notifier, pland (daemon) * examples: holiday files for various countries * docs: various docs and scripts for generating different doc formats * perl script: script for killing pland * miscellaneous: pixmap, resource files for Monocrome and Black&White, README * netplan directory: needed to be mode 777 for netplan, used for shared appointments Ok.... * The binaries go in /usr/local/bin (easy), examples in * /usr/local/share/doc/plan, docs in /usr/local/share/doc, perl I think all docs should go to the "plan" subdirectory, in case you meant put some things right under "doc" and some one level down.... * script in /usr/local/etc(?), miscellaneous in * /usr/local/share/doc/plan(?). If the perl script is for the superuser to kill/restart the daemon, it should probably go to sbin. * What about the netplan directory? In the unpatched distribution, * it wanted to go in /usr/local/lib/netplan.dir. Should it be * /usr/local/etc/netplan.dir? "Shared" appointments, right? How about share/netplan.dir? :) * I kind of used samba as my basis for making /usr/local/plan (is samba still * /usr/local/samba?), but I don't like this because you have to add * /usr/local/(plan,samba)/bin to your search path. There aren't many good examples in this area.... Satoshi