On Mon, Aug 16, 2010 at 09:01:42PM +0200, Bernhard R. Link wrote: > * Perry E. Metzger <pe...@piermont.com> [100816 20:21]: > > The most reasonable argument against altering such things is that > > after decades, people are used to the whole /usr thing and the fight > > to change it isn't worthwhile. That I will agree with -- see the > > emotional reactions people get when you suggest their preferred layout > > is an "onion". > > Accusion people of irrational behaviour almost always results in > irrational behviour. Either they were irrational already before or > making false insulting accusations. So I should better not tell you > that accusing people of irrational behaviour is quite irrational...
There is a rational reason for doing this at least for servers. Having a small root partition can be a huge advantage because it minimizes the chances that it will get corrupted. Making the root read-only is even better from that perspective (but generally requires more work). What I like to do for servers that absolutely, positively can't go down, and for which I don't have redudant servers (mainly because I'm too poor :-) is to have a root partition which is small (say, half a gig) and then mirror it onto another partition on a separate spindle, and set up grub so I can boot off of either root partition. (If the BIOS has a way for me to specify via a serial console booting off of the 2nd hard drive, even better; then I can have a duplicate grub setup on the 2nd hard drive as well.) I used to do this for desktops as well, but these days, a rescue CD is easy enough to use. - Ted -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to debian-devel-requ...@lists.debian.org with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact listmas...@lists.debian.org Archive: http://lists.debian.org/20100819005027.ga16...@thunk.org