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Re: [MiNT] MiNTLib 0.52.3b
> |> > |> That /bin and /usr/bin are different folders.
> |> >
> |> > In which way??? That is just plain broken.
> |>
> |> It is not. In fact, systems that mindlessly stuff everything in
> |> /usr are the ones that broke older traditions, without any good
> |> reason.
>
> What has this to do with /bin vs /usr/bin? If /bin == /usr/bin then you
> can find everything in /bin what is in /usr/bin and vice versa. How can
> this break anything?
/bin is meant for the utmost basic necesary binaries. It can be
on a really tiny partiton and contains just enough to boot and
maintain a system (in conjunction with /sbin).
What symlinking breaks is, people mindlessly define /usr/bin or
/bin for every command they call in a script or Makefile and if
others on systems where the binaries are correctly distributed
between /bin and /sbin, then all hell breaks loose. When one
has to port some source-code, things are even worse.
--
Martin-Eric Racine http://www.pp.fishpool.fi/~q-funk/M-E/
The ATARI TT030 Homepage http://funkyware.atari.org/TT030/
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"When the time comes, I will know and I shall be." Q-Funk