> On Tue, 5 May 2009 17:36:02 +0200 > m...@linux.it (Marco d'Itri) wrote: > > > I have been told by upstream maintainers of one of my packages and > > by prominent developers of other distributions that supporting a > > standalone /usr is too much work and no other distribution worth > > mentioning does it (not Ubuntu, not Fedora, not SuSE). > > > > I know that Debian supports this, but I also know that maintaning > > forever large changes to packages for no real gain sucks. > > > > So, does anybody still see reasons to continue supporting a > > standalone /usr?
You can lvm resize a standalone /usr by booting single user (I've done it when my /usr got too small). In addition getting rid of a standalone /usr will break existing configurations. It would break mine, for instance, because I partitioned my hard drive based on the knowledge that /usr could be a separate filesystem. What about nfs-served /usr? Regards, Daniel -- And that's my crabbing done for the day. Got it out of the way early, now I have the rest of the afternoon to sniff fragrant tea-roses or strangle cute bunnies or something. -- Michael Devore GnuPG Key Fingerprint 86 F5 81 A5 D4 2E 1F 1C http://gnupg.org The C Shore (Daniel Dickinson's Website) http://cshore.is-a-geek.com
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