On 2/12/15 10:57 PM, Jan D. wrote: > Hi. > > If we keep site-lis as it is, we can have several Emacs versions installed, with different site-lisp:s. > Also, changing files in site-lisp does not require root priviliges. If we keep things as they are now, the site lisp file points to a random directory that doesn't exist! Take a look again: >> "/Users/build/workspace/Emacs-Multi-Build/label/mavericks/emacs-source/nextstep/Emacs.app/Contents/Resources/share/emacs/24.4/site-lisp" This Emacs was built on a different machine than the one it's running on. My machine has no "build" user and therefore no "/Users/build" directory. I certainly cannot create that directory without being root. > Your change breaks both those feaures. No, it actually doesn't. First off, it only affects self contained nextstep builds, which (as I described above) are currently totally busted. Secondly, it doesn't preclude different site lisps for different Emacsen. Here's the epaths.h line generated with my patch: #define PATH_SITELOADSEARCH "/Library/emacs/25.0.50/site-lisp:/Library/emacs/site-lisp" That still ends up with the version in the site lisp path, so there can multiple site lisps. Yes, the site lisp path is in /Library which is root:wheel, but that is the correct place to put site wide things on the Mac. If you want non-site wide lisps, you can always edit your .emacs with no root privileges. Thinking about it, I'm not sure why non-root is a good idea for site wide stuff in the first place: On a multi-user system, it seems like a security problem for one user to affect all the other user's site-lisp. That *should* require root (like it does on linux). > I don't think this is a good idea. Please reconsider. This really seems like the correct fix to me. -David