On Sun, 2010-02-14 at 13:33 -0600, Etherus wrote: > Then you type: "cd /usr/bin" this will move you to that directory once > here you need to use a text program to create the file "steam". > .../snippage/.... > Code: > #!/bin/sh > # > # Steam wrapper script > # > exec wine "c:\\program files\\steam\\steam.exe" "$@" > > Type "chmod +x steam" to make it executable. > Its not a good idea to put anything you write yourself in /usr/bin. Quite apart from anything else, unless you remember to put a copy somewhere safe (i.e. in your login user and back it up) you'll lose it the next time you upgrade Linux. Here's what I do. It's a little more complex, but it does mean that you can do a fresh install of the next Linux release without losing anything you've written, installed or downloaded into your login directory. The initial setup is must easily done as part of a Linux install. This description assumes that your distro creates one big partition that contains everything except the swap space. 1. Do a custom install rather than accepting the distro's default disk partitions. Set up these partitions: - /boot (2GB) - swap (2 or 3 times your RAM) - / (20GB is plenty) 12GB is probably enough if you're tight on disk) - /home (the rest of the disk) 2. After the install is complete, move the /usr/local directory tree to /home/local and replace it with a symbolic link pointing to the new location of the tree: - login as root - cd /usr - mv local /home - ln -s /home/local local 3. Echo $PATH, which should show that /usr/local/bin is in PATH. - if it isn't, edit /etc/profile to include it. 4. Put any scripts you wrote or programs you compiled in /usr/local/bin. 5. Next time you install Linux: - repeat the customisation, but DON'T reformat /home ! - after the install, use the user and group maintenance tool to set up your login name remenbering to: - use the same user name, group (and password if you wish) - use the same directory name (/home/user) - use the same user id and group id as before. - now when you login as usual all your stuff should be where you left it. 6. Decide on a backup strategy and stick to it. I use a USB disk that I reformatted as ext3. Always keep it offline in a safe place. I make backups with rsync because its fast. Martin