Re: Thoughts on the location of configuration files
От | Dave Page |
---|---|
Тема | Re: Thoughts on the location of configuration files |
Дата | |
Msg-id | FED2B709E3270E4B903EB0175A49BCB1047390@dogbert.vale-housing.co.uk обсуждение исходный текст |
Ответ на | Thoughts on the location of configuration files (Peter Eisentraut <peter_e@gmx.net>) |
Список | pgsql-hackers |
> -----Original Message----- > From: Bruce Momjian [mailto:pgman@candle.pha.pa.us] > Sent: 19 December 2001 02:07 > To: Thomas Swan > Cc: Peter Eisentraut; PostgreSQL Development > Subject: Re: Thoughts on the location of configuration files > > > > >I suggest that we wire-in the location of the configuration files > > >into the binaries as ${sysconfdir} as determined by > configure. This > > >would default to /usr/local/pgsql/etc, so the "everything in one > > >place" system is still somewhat preserved for those that > care. For > > >the confused, we could for a while install into the data directory > > >files named "postgresql.conf", "pg_hba.conf", etc. that > only contain > > >text like "This file is now to be found at @sysconfdir@ by popular > > >demand." > > > > > In keeping with some of the more modern daemons (xinetd, > etc) you might > > want to consider something like /etc/pgsql.d/ as a > directory name. > > Where as most folders with a .d contain a set of files or a > > referenced > > by the main config file in /etc. This is on a RedHat system, but I > > think the logic applies well if you are flexible the > location of the > > base system config directory. (/usr/local/etc vs /etc, etc.) > > I often wondered, if it is directory, why do they need the > '.d' in the name? What possible purpose could it have except > to look ugly? :-) Isn't this a RedHat thing anyway? Precisely why I use Slackware... Regards, Dave.
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