Стандарт на структуру каталогов файловой системы. (Filesystem Hierarchy Standard)

Introduction

This page is the home of the Filesystem Hierarchy Standard (FHS).

The current version is 2.2. It was announced on May 24, 2001.

The filesystem standard has been designed to be used by Unix distribution developers, package developers, and system implementors. However, it is primarily intended to be a reference and is not a tutorial on how to manage a Unix filesystem or directory hierarchy.

FHS Continues

The mailing list is now churning over proposals for FHS 2.3. All proposals should be presented as patches to the groff source to be regarded seriously (use "diff -u draft.mm.orig draft.mm").

This process shall be over seen by the FHS editor, Rusty Russell.

The expected timeline for the FHS is as follows:

FHS 2.3 Discussion: 12 November 2001
This is where we get to discuss what changes should occur in FHS 2.3.
FHS 2.3 Final Proposal Week: March 10 2002 -- March 16 2002
This is where we prod everyone to send their patches to the list. Any patches sent to the list with any degree of support shall be included in the Proposals Table.
FHS 2.3 Proposal Modification: March 17 2002 -- March 31 2002
This is a chance to refine proposals and eliminate conflicting ones, leaving the strongest standing. No new proposals shall be accepted. Proposals which evoke widespread revolts and looting will also be withdrawn at this stage.
FHS 2.3 Elimination: April 1 2002 -- April 15 2002
This is where the serious elimination gets done. All the "change the world by substituting one set of problems for another" proposals get thrown away at this point. Leaving those proposals having clear merit and meeting the stated aims of the FHS.
FHS 2.3 Fungible Time: Extensible
Judging from FHS 2.2, it will take us another month to actually get a standard out the door.

FHS Documents, Resources, and Links:

Any discrepancy found in the various formats of the specification will be resolved in favor of the text version.


6 November 2001 - Maintained by freestandards.org