Ah, that's what he meant. Wasn't/isn't there some project to standardize the 
basic directory structure? Linux Filesystem or some such? I don't agree that we 
should narrow the distro gene pool (it's only heresy, not greatest heresy), but 
a bit more standardization (like dir structure) would be nice.

Quoting Bill Layer <blayer at qwest.net>:

> On Fri, 29 Jun 2001 09:51:45 GMT
> "Rick Engebretson" <eng at pinenet.com> wrote:
>  
> > MS Windows (since 3.0) does have a very clean directory and system 
> > configuration structure. I realize this is an apples and oranges 
> > comparison. But even simple configuration of Linux isn't simple.
> 
> There was an article on this in Linux Journal about a year ago, but they
> really only scratched the surface. One problem, is that the exact
> structure and content of the trees varies from distro to distro... and
> then there is the /opt/ tree, which seems to be the place that all 3rd
> party software will eventually go, but since there is no distro
> standard,
> this is dubious.
> 
> here is a basic breakdown.. I'm probably wrong about a lot of this
> myself...
> 
> /bin - binaries, most basic commands are in here
> /sbin - system binaries, normally only root runs these
> /usr - vaguely user files, and programs that users run. However, root
> still owns most of this... 
> $PATH/local - software installed on the local machine.. once again, a
> vague descriptor. Root still owns it.
> /mnt - other filessystems are mounted here: cdrom, floppy, nfs, windows
> etc.
> /tmp - temporary files, this is a volatile directory.
> /var - files that chage frequently, like logs, www content etc.
> /etc - system configuration files
> /boot - files used by the LILO bootloader, sometimes the kernel is her,
> sometimes it's in /
> /proc - a special virtual filesystem, a portal to the kernel and the
> system harware. The contents of /proc is created at boottime.
> /dev - special files, that are really links to device drivers. Each
> device
> is represented by a /dev/? file. This is currently changing.
> /opt - optional software, a place that may someday take over much of
> what
> is in /usr/? and several other trees.
> /lib - critical system software libraries, /lib/modules contains the
> kernel module tree.
> /root - root's home directory
> /shlib - these libraries are for SCO compatibility, and are part of the
> ibcs2 package.
> 
> 
> While I know it is the greatest heresy, it would be good if one day we
> could settle on a single distro, or at least a single distro standard
> for
> the directory tree. This would ease so many things...
> 
> 
>                            -.bill.layer.-
>                           
> -.those who are talking don't know, and those who know aren't talking.-
> 
>            -.frogtown.-     -.minnesota.-      -.u.s.a.-
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