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PLEASEEEEE, dont move gnome to /usr, please.
I want gnome in a separate directory, please.
/opt 4 president ![]()
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GNOME is already on /usr.
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what ?
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my gnome is in /opt, not in /usr
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Then you haven't updated yet or you're using a mirror that isn't synced yet.
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what ?
lol I'm actually actualizing while I write this, I liked it better in /opt too, but it doesn't botter me to have it in usr either.
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except, there's no reason for keeping it in opt now ![]()
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What actually was the reason for gnome to be in /opt?
I always was interested which kind of packages should be in /opt and which in /usr...
Ability is nothing without opportunity.
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What actually was the reason for gnome to be in /opt?
I always was interested which kind of packages should be in /opt and which in /usr...
Gentoo for instance puts proprietary packages like some games into /opt and all open source packages are put in /usr.
When i switched to arch, i was suprised that here is a different way of handling that.
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What actually was the reason for gnome to be in /opt?
I always was interested which kind of packages should be in /opt and which in /usr...
I've read that there's too much unnecessary stuff that's needed to be done when they're in /opt, like messing with scrpts, config files, PKGBUILDS, etc. I think a bunch of apps in /opt that requires stuff from /usr needs to do a lot symlinking on files and it's quite a hassle to do for each update. Anyway, in short, it'll be lighter load for the devs/maintainers.
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It will surely cut down on IRC talks like this:
guy: I just installed Gnome/Firefox/whatever but I get "command not found"?!?
archer: log out and in again or run 'source /etc/profile'
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1000
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Just updated my system with the Gnome move to /usr. I have two observations:
1 Had to edit the /etc/inittab line:
x:5:respawn:/opt/gnome/sbin/gdm -nodaemonTo
x:5:respawn:/usr/sbin/gdm -nodaemon2 When I rebooted, Firestarter ran the initialization program again. I had to reset options, and policies were totally gone and needed to be redone.
That's the only things I had to do.
I noticed that the /opt/gnome folder still exists with some sub-folders. I assume this is some left over files that just didn't get deleted. At this point in time, if you have done a full system update can you safely delete the /opt/gnome folder to clean up the system?
Pudge
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Some of those left over files belong to the gnome-common package, which is probably still installed. IIRC, some packages' install files use an absolute path when running gconf.
- Rpg Cyco
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It's also possible that some community/unsupported packages (like mine
) installed in /opt/gnome haven't been moved to /usr yet. You should do a 'pacman -Qo' on these files to know to which package they belong.
I would recommend keeping the gnome-common package for a while to make sure that these packages still install and function correctly as rpgcyco said. I guess that eventually gnome-common will be removed from the repo.
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Is this going to happen with kde, too?
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Moving kde to /usr is not unlikely to happen, but I think Tobias will hold off the move for a while. I think KDE will come to /usr when it hits 4.0.
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Is this going to happen with kde, too?
I have heard that Fedora at example have kde in /usr and i think this is all a definition of what is a add-on packages and what is part of the default installation.
http://www.linux.com/guides/Linux-Files … /opt.shtml
But don't ask me too more because i am a normal human and so i like the different directories in /opt.-)
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Late?
except, there's no reason for keeping it in opt now"
:mad
what about
http://www.pathname.com/fhs/pub/fhs-2.3.html
or
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Late?
iphitus wrote:except, there's no reason for keeping it in opt now"
:mad
what about
http://www.pathname.com/fhs/pub/fhs-2.3.html
orattila wrote:
this thread's about the gnome move from opt, and as I said above, and you quoted, there's no reason for gnome to be kept in opt now.
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of course it's about moving gnome from /opt to /usr...
never mind ![]()
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