On Mon, Nov 07, 2005 at 07:39:51PM +0200, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: > Again as a user I hope this would be useful: > In my experience if it turns out, a sysadmin is lazy, then sometimes I > start to feel I have to get back to paper technology. Once i had to make a > graphics and I tend to use Gnuplot. And it turned out that our admin had > upgraded something and one library required for gnuplot was not installed > so i had to use MS Excel, because the features in OpenOffice.org were not > enyough yet. I think it is a problem, when the sysadmin has too much > power. It is better to allow the user to install programs.
You can. In a case like this, where you want gnuplot right now and not wait for the admin to fix the system (which may take a long time), you can just install the library in your home dir and use that through LD_LIBRARY_PATH. (That assumes this happens on a GNU/Linux box, which seems unlikely if you can run MS Excel on it. Ah well, you get the point I hope.) It should be *allowed* for users to install their own executables and others should be able to use them if the owner allows that. This is already the case on GNU/Linux. You can create ~/bin and add it to your PATH in .bashrc/.bash_profile. Then you can add links to other joe's programs in ~joe/bin to there, so they are in your path. Or optionally, you can add ~joe/bin to your path so everything he creates will automatically work. Note that this requires quite a lot of trust in both cases. This is a very explicit way of trusting other people's processes. I think this is good. Thanks, Bas -- I encourage people to send encrypted e-mail (see http://www.gnupg.org). If you have problems reading my e-mail, use a better reader. Please send the central message of e-mails as plain text in the message body, not as HTML and definitely not as MS Word. Please do not use the MS Word format for attachments either. For more information, see http://129.125.47.90/e-mail.html
signature.asc
Description: Digital signature
_______________________________________________ L4-hurd mailing list [email protected] http://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/l4-hurd
