**On 24 Oct, CS (Christian Schwarz) wrote: CS>Policy suggestion CS> CS>In continuation of this policy I suggest to keep all documentation files CS>in one place: /usr/doc/<pkg>. In case of non-english docs, the files would CS>be placed into a subdirectory /usr/doc/<pkg>/LANG_<locale>
I only view disadvantages with this solution: a) users can't change the directory to their own <language> documentations tree. b) no gains, since users who change the directory to /usr/doc/<pkg> already find non-english documentations with the links: /usr/doc/<pkg>/<language> -> /usr/doc/LANG/<language>/<pkg> c) /usr/doc/LANG/<language> policy is much more the continuation of the classic /usr/man/<language> or /usr/X11R6/lib/X11/<language> filesystem policy. d) we must change again all packages with non-english docs ;-) CS>The locale string can have the form <language> or <language>_<territory>. CS>It is the maintainers job to decide which form to be used for a specific CS>documentation file. I'm not sure that we need <territory>... CS>The LANG_ prefix is used to reduce the possibility of a file name CS>conflict. (I don't think an extra LANG/ directory is appropriate here.) CS> CS>Any program/script that needs to access documentation files mechanically CS>should search for the files in the following directories (in exactly this CS>order): CS> CS> /usr/doc/<pkg>/LANG_<language>_<territory>/ CS> /usr/doc/<pkg>/LANG_<language>/ CS> /usr/doc/<pkg>/ I prefer this order: [ /usr/doc/LANG/<language>_<territory>/<pkg>/ ] /usr/doc/LANG/<language>/<pkg>/ /usr/doc/<pkg>/ -- Christophe Le Bars - [EMAIL PROTECTED] - [EMAIL PROTECTED] 1000110101011100101011000110101011100101010001101010111001010101000110 Utilisez Debian! - http://www.teaser.fr/~clebars Linux dans l'entreprise - http://www.alcove.fr