The Fungi <fu...@yuggoth.org> writes: > On Fri, Aug 20, 2010 at 10:45:04PM +0200, Christoph Anton Mitterer wrote: >> Of course,.. but only because your /usr is on the root-fs. >> >> And there are many good reasons to put it on its own fs, as already >> outlayed here... > [...] > > No disagreement there... I'm much in favor of continuing to support > /usr on its own filesystem for a variety of reasons. And I > acknowledge the circularity of the argument was only partial (I did > qualify that by calling it *somewhat* circular). My point was that, > playing devil's advocate, it's not enough to suggest that lacking > the tools/logic in the initrd to mount an encrypted /usr is reason > alone to have /usr separate from the / filesystem.
We already have the logic in there to mount anything as /. /usr can't be any harder so that isn't an argument. There is nothing you can do with /usr that can't allready be done to /. I think the biggest argument for multiple partitions is that / and /usr can be read-only and that gives a huge reliability improvement. But that argument doesn't really tell why /usr should be seperate. The biggest argument for supporting a seperate /usr I think is for historical reasons. Many many systems are simply setup that way and requiring people to reinstall from scratch for an update is not the Debian way. I think against that the other reasons are minor though still valid even for new installs. MfG GOswin -- 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/87r5hncbay....@frosties.localdomain