2.1 KiB
Conventions
Naming convention for servers
Server names have the form
purpose[0-9][0-9]{,-test}.psi.ch, where
purpose is the purpose of the server or the service
provided by it. Examples are:
puppet01.psi.chis the productive puppetmasterrepo00-test.psi.chis the test Yum repository server
When putting system names into configuration files, we always use
lower case and the fully qualified domain name. Good:
puppet01.psi.ch. Bad: puppet01 or
PUPPET01.PSI.CH.
Names for programs
The general conventions regarding filenames apply (see File system hierarchy and
filenames). In addition, scripts should not include a suffix
indicating the language they are written in. The latter is an
implementation detail and does not matter to the caller of the
script/program. A good name could be pli-system-info, a bad
one would be pli-system-info.sh.
File system hierarchy and filenames
Files should generally be placed where the distribution and/or the FHS expect them. Deviations and clarifications are documented in this section.
The base directory for files is /usr if the files are
relevant to end-users, /opt/pli if the files are relevant
only to Linux administrators. This avoids polluting the PATH for
end-users as well as naming conflicts.
Executables (scripts or otherwise) that are meant for interactive use
should go into BASE/bin or BASE/sbin as
appropriate.
Executables which are primarily called by other executables to
implement part of their functionality should be place in
BASE/libexec. This avoids polluting $PATH.
Files and directories should have names starting with
pli- or be placed in a directory with such a name. This
makes it obvious whether a file belongs to an internal package and
avoids collisions.
Note: this section used to recommend psi- as the prefix.
It turns out that this prefix is being used in various other places
already, hence we use pli-, where PLI stands for PSI Linux
Infrastructure.