Mark Lentczner wrote:
On Dec 22, 2009, at 12:35 PM, Duncan Coutts wrote:
One thing I think I've seen said before however is that things in /Library and 
~/Library are supposed to be app bundles or frameworks or some other special 
OSX packaging thing, rather than traditional Unix-style installations.

Nope - not true. There are all sorts of things under the Library directories. 
Again, note the list of other languages that store things under /Library. In 
those cases, those systems are storing installed packages in just the normal 
way they would on Linux or other unix systems.

Those languages ---Perl, Python, Java--- are all used internally by the OSX system itself in order to run startup scripts, maintain the system, etc. That is, they are provided *by* the system, *for* the system. Users are free to use them, but they should not alter them in any way.

If you want a newer version of Perl installed, everyone in the Perl community agrees that it should go into /usr/local or similar. Overriding the system Perl installation is known to cause issues with some of the system scripts, often resulting in very obscure kinds of breakage.

Apple provides a Java6 bundle for OSX 10.5 on Intel CPUs (though Java6 is not available by any other reliable means for any other combination of versions and architectures). While it is possible to instruct OSX to switch to using the Java6 bundle for its internal work, this is again known to cause problems and is highly discouraged.

I'm not as familiar with the use of Python internally, but I'm sure it's more of the same.


/Library is only for the system to use and for bundle/framework installs. Thus, if we are to install things there, then the installation should use the bundle/framework installer.

~/Library is a bit more liberal since that's where all user apps dump their preferences. But again, ~/Library is intended more for system stuff and GUI stuff; it's not intended for commandline *nix applications. There are some tools which cross over between command line and GUI and they will occasionally put things in ~/Library (e.g., a couple LaTeX distros) but there are murmurs about that not always working out so well.

--
Live well,
~wren
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