m...@linux.it (Marco d'Itri) writes: > On Dec 07, Goswin von Brederlow <goswin-...@web.de> wrote: > >> Give everyone at least 10 years headstart to migrate existing systems >> away from having a seperate /usr partition and for people to stop making >> a seperate /usr on new installs. > Actually, Red Hat's goal *is* to support a separate /usr, they just want > to have the initramfs mount it.
I guess mounting /usr is no more complicated than mounting / in initramfs. Finding out what modules and software is needed for that should be the same code as for /. And maybe that would at least give incentive to finally add fsck support to initramfs. Doing fsck on a mounted filesystem always sucks and you need to reboot on any change. Personally I've considered giving up a seperate /usr partition. Since I switched to Debian kernels (something I actually regretted the last days because alt-sysrq is bastardised in Debian) the / isn't that small anymore. And we are finally getting to a point where read-only / works out-of-the-box so /usr doesn't have to be seperate to be read-only. > I am not really looking forward to keep reverting these changes in my > package, and since Red Hat controls most Linux infrastructure now other > packages will face the same problem. One more reason to get away from udev. :) 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/87y5un4dqk.fsf@frosties.localnet