On Dec 11, 2007 12:09 PM, Stefan Teleman <stefan.teleman at sun.com> wrote: > Shawn Walker wrote: > > > 3rd parties; such as this project. Sun, at last check, isn't the one > > delivering KDE, Qt4, or stdcxx (yet). > > Huh ? Really ? > > This project is a Third Party ? Are we a separate legal entity ? > > Last i checked this project is part of OpenSolaris. OpenSolaris is a > "Third Party" now ?
At last check, you were talking about delivering this software for Solaris 10 U3 or U4 systems. That implies that unless you are going to integrate KDE into Solaris 10 that you must deliver the software as a 3rd party since Sun won't be the one delivering it. Therefore, you should be following the guidelines your own company established for 3rd party software delivery which means installing into /opt. As far as OpenSolaris is concerned, just because a project is on this website does not mean that Sun is the one delivering it nor does it mean that it officially represents the OpenSolaris project and that it can choose to deliver software wherever it chooses. Let's say another project is started on OpenSolaris.org that is C++ and wants to build and use the "standard C++ library" instead of stdcxx; congratulations, you've just created a conflict because of your special build of Qt. I'll say it again; C++ dependencies that do not use the "standard" expected flags/runtime/libraries/whatever should not be installed into "standard" locations. -- Shawn Walker, Software and Systems Analyst http://binarycrusader.blogspot.com/ "To err is human -- and to blame it on a computer is even more so." - Robert Orben
