Matthew Garrett wrote: > Unit files need to be in /, so moving them would either require creating > a /share for distributions that haven't merged /usr or putting up with > inconsistent naming between distributions. Consistency is a virtue and > the chances of getting anyone else to accept /share are minimal, so /lib > it is. Meanwhile, libexec's not part of any non-draft version of the FHS > and doesn't exist on most other distributions, and the path of the > helper binaries has ended up in a bunch of unit files. So, similar > problems. > > What benefit do you see in modifying systemd? Consistency WITHIN FEDORA, which should be worlds more important than consistency with other distros, which frankly I don't give a darn about. As for libexec, the FHS explicitly allows lib* under the multilib clause and there's nothing banning * = exec there, so IMHO libexec is already compliant to the letter of the FHS. If the other distros refuse to accept that, that's their problem. Systemd should just require it upstream. libexec is also part of the GNU file system conventions, so it wouldn't just be systemd. If systemd upstream refuses to do that, the systemd maintainers should be forced to change it in Fedora. And a /share also makes a lot of sense for distros which have a separate /usr. There too, systemd should just require it upstream, but again, if they refuse to do that, they should be forced to change it in Fedora. Being strict there might actually end up getting our sane layout enforced through systemd upstream, rather than having it diluted in the name of consistency with other distros. And if it doesn't, it's too bad for the other distros, why should we care? Kevin Kofler -- devel mailing list devel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx https://admin.fedoraproject.org/mailman/listinfo/devel