On Aug 31, Thomas Goirand <z...@debian.org> wrote: > If I need to have /usr mounted before init starts, then I'm more > or less dead, and I'll have to get a recovery CD / USB. If this is a concern to you, you can install the grml-rescueboot package and/or a similar on-disk rescue image which will provide you with a complete rescue environment.
> If I don't need /usr, everything is fine, I can boot into single > user mode, and repair. In some case you can, in some others you cannot. But if you have a complete bootable rescue environment, which if slightly tuned is going to be as big as one or two initramfs (IOW, trivially small), then you are safe against any kind of crashes. > Now, you tell me: what are the advantage of requiring having > everything in /usr exactly? I really don't get what the advantage is. I am not going to argue about this again right now. -- ciao, Marco
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