In article <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> you wrote: > I do believe you've missed the point. Splitting /usr from / helps in > a teeny percentage of cases, and most of the cases where it "helps" > that have been mentioned here, it actually doesn't. Yet, splitting > /usr/lib, which is grotesquely huge and hard to deal with, is treated > as an impossible thing, needing a great level of proof before it can > be considered. This is very foolish.
Thats why we need proof that it helps. Nobody has provided any numbers, here. > If you are against unnecessary things, then geez, you should be > getting rid of nearly every separate directory. You missed the point. It is not about getting rid of directories it is about creating a new one. And nobody has yet shown numbers which provide good reasons to introduce the new dir (with all the hard work required for the transition) Gruss Bernd -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]