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Date:      Tue, 18 Apr 1995 20:45:31 +0100
From:      "wmbfmk@urc.tue.nl" <wmbfmk@urc.tue.nl>
To:        ports@FreeBSD.org
Cc:        asami@cs.berkeley.edu (Satoshi Asami), Travis L Priest <T.L.Priest@LaRC.NASA.GOV>, branson@dvals1.larc.nasa.gov, Tad Guy <E.E.Guy@LaRC.NASA.GOV>
Subject:   Re: Ports hackers wanted! (fwd) 
Message-ID:  <199504181945.UAA16150@nietzsche>

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[ a lot of stuff about new package scheme deleted ]

> 4 WHAT ARE THE ADVANTAGES OF USING THESE 'STANDARDS' 
> 
> This has turned out to have more advantages than we originally
> anticipated.  I'll enumerate:
> 
> * A package is now a well-formed collection of files under a common
>   directory (/usr/local/pkg-rev).
> 
> * You no longer have files belonging to one package in directories
>   where the vendor OS is installed, so it is less likely to be deleted
>   or modified when you perform an OS upgrade.

In light of this, I would like to see our X-packages go into a seperate
/usr/local/X11 tree. I don't want to reinstall all X-packages when
I upgrade my /usr/X11R6 tree, everytime a new XFree86.

I have been running this way for some time now, and I can even have
the applications defaults files in the /usr/local/X11 tree by setting
an environment variable:

	 XAPPLRESDIR=/usr/local/X11/lib/X11/app-defaults

This way all files for an X-package can go into the seperate tree.

If we can't provide an upgrade-kit from version to version we could
at least try to make it as easy as possible.


Marc.



Marc van Kempen                    wmbfmk@urc.tue.nl

He's dead Jim ..., kick him if you don't believe me.




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