----- Original Message ----- > From: "Tomas Orsava" <[email protected]> > To: "Development discussions related to Fedora" > <[email protected]>, "David Kaspar" <[email protected]>, > "Kamil Dudka" <[email protected]>, "Miro Hrončok" <[email protected]>, > "Petr Viktorin" <[email protected]>, > "Siteshwar Vashisht" <[email protected]> > Sent: Wednesday, May 2, 2018 3:23:10 PM > Subject: Prioritizing ~/.local/bin over /usr/bin on the PATH > > Hi! > I'd like to propose putting the ~/.local/bin in front of the /usr/bin on > the PATH. > > Currently /usr/bin has priority over ~/.local/bin, which causes a [bug] > where the old system-installed executable written in Python (from > /usr/bin) is launched, but it finds new Python sources (installed into > $HOME) which it doesn't work with and crashes. > > [bug] https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1571650 > > I believe the current configuration breaks the intuitive expectation > that things installed closer to the user should take priority. That's > for example how it works with Python. > Interestingly, ubuntu and opensuse do not have ~/.local/bin on their > PATH (though Ubuntu has ~/bin) so we can't take guidance there. > > Does anyone see a reason not to prioritize ~/.local/bin over /usr/bin?
Most of the discussion in this thread focuses on security rather than sane behavior. It is going to be a system wide change. An application may get affected if it depends on system provided utilites which gets overridden by ~/.local/bin. For e.g. > cat /bin/foo #!/bin/bash ls -l > cat ~/.local/bin/ls #!/bin/bash echo "Strange world!" > /bin/foo Strange world! So this change breaks something that is outside user's installation. This should happen only if a user has explicitly overriden $PATH to prioritize user installation paths. > > Regards, > Tomas > > -- -- Siteshwar Vashisht _______________________________________________ devel mailing list -- [email protected] To unsubscribe send an email to [email protected]
