On May 09, "Bernhard R. Link" <brl...@debian.org> wrote: > Or in other words: to make essential functionality not available if > /usr is broken. Again: this is not we are discussing. Essential functionality is moving to /usr anyway, no matter if /bin will become a symlink to /usr/bin.
> Having a seperate / means you have an instant rescue image that has > just the right kernel and tools you need to repair the rest of your > system. OK, so you could have an even *smaller* / with a *real* independent rescue image like grml in /boot. > You also have one small filesystem with all the important > stuff like /etc in it while the boring large distro stuff is in > another partition. You also have a partition border between > most of the random stuff and the important stuff. Indeed, if the content of /{bin,sbin,lib} is moved to /usr you can have a small filesystem with all the important stuff like /etc in it and the boring large distro stuff (like 100 MB of kernel modules for each kernel, currently in /lib) in another partition. I am glad that we sorted out your use case as well. -- ciao, Marco
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