>>>>> Marco d'Itri <m...@linux.it> writes: >>>>> On Oct 11, Ivan Shmakov <i...@gray.siamics.net> wrote:
>> Saving a dozen of bytes in ${PATH} doesn't seem like an >> astonishing idea, anyway. What's the point, then? > It is explained in the Red Hat wiki page. Try reading it again. Indeed, I've just read it. To summarize: our / and /usr/ became quite tangled over the years, so let's use initramfs instead of /, and / instead of /usr. Honestly, I believe that Debian hasn't messed up that that badly. (In particular, I still think that it's possible to boot without /usr being available.) However, should initramfs really be considered “Debian's brand new /”, I demand that both e2fsck(8) and bash(1) be included into one by default, so that one would still be able to boot and repair a damaged /usr/^W / from there. To me, going this way means that initramfs becomes subject to unconstrained growth. Somehow, I deem it less acceptable for initramfs than for /. -- FSF associate member #7257 -- 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/864nzf32hn....@gray.siamics.net