Build System wrote : > yum-2.0.5.20040224-2 > -------------------- > * Thu Feb 26 2004 Florian La Roche <Florian.LaRoche@xxxxxxxxx> > > - mv /etc/init.d -> /etc/rc.d/init.d About this one, using a macro seems to be the right way of deciding which path to use, and I've seen _initrddir actually being used for it. Still, its name seems strange. I've asked on rpm-list about this, but got no answer so far. Below is that message, in case some people here have some insight on this... Matthias -- From: Matthias Saou To: RPM-List <rpm-list@redhat> Subject: The origin of _initrddir Date: Fri, 27 Feb 2004 16:51:46 +0100 Hi, Just a quick question : I've seen %{_initrddir} used here and there in order to abstract /etc/rc.d/init.d (or /etc/init.d), and wondered why it was named that way, is IMHO it's quite confusing wrt the Linux kernel's initial ramdisk which "exposes" itself in various ways, like /initrd's presence, the initrd files in /boot and the grub/lilo lines... Did the person who introduced _initrddir just mix them up, make a typo or something? It would make much more sense to me if it was _initddir or _rcdinitddir (although that one misses the point) or _servicedir or... Just wondering. Matthias -- Clean custom Red Hat Linux rpm packages : http://freshrpms.net/ Fedora Core release 1 (Yarrow) - Linux kernel 2.6.3-1.91 Load : 0.55 0.79 0.66