> Building in /usr/local is not common for BLFS users, it seems a bit > too BSD-ish. And the udev variants probably assume that everything it > uses is part of /usr, even more so for udev-from-systemd.
Back when I got my 486DX33 I was hoping to run BSD-386 on it, but it never came my way. First "real" OS I got for it was RHL-6.1 "Cartman" from a CD in a book. I don't know what BSDs habits are. I decided to consider LFS my "base" and whatever I choose add as "local", albeit there are some BLFS things that have found their way into /usr. My clone script installs LFS cleanly, then asks if the "enhancements" should be installed. One can choose. I shall be sad when udev gets screwed into systemd so tight it cannot be extracted. Sooner or later... -- Paul Rogers paulgrog...@fastmail.fm Rogers' Second Law: "Everything you do communicates." (I do not personally endorse any additions after this line. TANSTAAFL :-) -- http://www.fastmail.com - Email service worth paying for. Try it for free -- http://lists.linuxfromscratch.org/listinfo/blfs-support FAQ: http://www.linuxfromscratch.org/blfs/faq.html Unsubscribe: See the above information page