Asac, I appreciate your work on firefox and I thank you for the
information you provided today.  I am passing that information along to
several user groups who all seem to want FireFox 3.5 NOW, lol.  I wish
to understand your response to this bug as it seems unclear to me.

Right now the choice of which firefox to run is made by editing the
symbolic link at /usr/bin/firefox. Do you intentionally mean you will
not accept a patch that implements update-alternatives?  It seems you
do.

The alternatives systems comes from Ubuntu's Debian heritage and is
widely used and known about by users and system administrators.  It is a
collaborative system useful in managing symbolic links which I think is
what we are talking about. Firefox is used in many desktop environments,
not just Gnome, KDE and XFCE. I think this system provides a much more
robust and flexible solution to this complex problem rather than forcing
users to change anything in /usr/bin that is not able to be overridden
for other users or purposes.

http://www.debian.org/doc/debian-policy/ap-pkg-alternatives.html

>From man 8 update-alternatives:

update-alternatives  creates,  removes,  maintains  and displays
information about the symbolic links comprising the Debian alternatives
system.

It is possible for several programs fulfilling the same or similar
functions to be installed on a single system at the  same time. For
example, many systems have several text editors installed at once. This
gives choice to the users of a system, allowing each to use a different
editor, if desired, but makes it difficult for a program to make a good
choice for an editor to invoke if the user has not specified a
particular preference.

Debian’s alternatives system aims to solve this problem.  A generic name
in the  filesystem  is shared  by all files providing interchangeable
functionality.  The alternatives system and the system administrator
together determine which actual file is referenced by this generic name.
For example, if the text editors ed(1) and nvi(1) are both installed on
the system, the alternatives system will cause the generic name
/usr/bin/editor to refer to /usr/bin/nvi by default.  The system
administrator can override this and cause it to refer to /usr/bin/ed
instead, and the alternatives system will not alter this setting until
explicitly requested to do so.

-- 
add an alternative to /usr/bin/firefox
https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/380196
You received this bug notification because you are a member of Ubuntu
Bugs, which is subscribed to Ubuntu.

-- 
ubuntu-bugs mailing list
ubuntu-bugs@lists.ubuntu.com
https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-bugs

Reply via email to