Debian, and its shortcomings
Bob Keyes
bob at sinister.com
Tue Nov 4 17:31:48 EST 2003
On Tue, 4 Nov 2003, John Chambers wrote:
> Bob Keyes <bob at sinister.com> writes:
>
> > As I am installing debian 3.0 right now, I decided to double-check the
> > statements I made earlier about its extraneous packages. With the tasks of
> > conventional unix server and C/C++ , it does indeed install emacs20 and
> > emacs-common, along with ispell, libfreetype6, libglib, libgtk, libpng,
> > libxaw, pdksh, lpr, python, wenglish, xfree86, xlibsm abd zsh -- all
> > packages that are probably quite useful but certainly not appropriate for
> > the base install of a convential unix server.
>
> Well, I'd expect a server machine to include all the usual text
> editors, because you need them to handle config files and log
I disagree. An editor is usually someone makes a choice about using and
sticks with it; there's little need to have all of them on a server
maintained by one person. VI should probably be the default, though at
times I like Nano.
> s. And
> it would be handy to have as many shells and languages like perl,
> python, tcl, etc., because you need things like that to properly
> manage a server.
I don't know that Python is neccessary. Perl didn't used to be but it
seems to be these days. TCL...well some people might say its neccessary
Things like C/C++ and their libraries, or the
> printer packages should probably be kept separate so they can be
> installed only when needed. (Though I always feel somewhat crippled
> on a machine without a C compiler. ;-)
Yes as do I. But when you're trying to make a simple, small system such
development tools are not neccessary. However they shoudl only be an
apt-get away.
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