On Thu, Apr 05, 2007 at 04:58:12PM -0500, Manon Metten wrote: > On 4/5/07, Greg Folkert <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > >On Thu, 2007-04-05 at 16:43 -0500, Manon Metten wrote: > > > >> The odd thing however is, when I type 'ls /' /xyz as well as /store > >> show up, although /xyz is not mounted of course. How do I get rid of > >> this /xyz statement (and where does it come from)? >
Manon, This discussion wouldn't be complete without a note about the FHS. (see man hier and the debian policy manual). The FHS is a policy document about what directories can be where and what they're used for. Almost the whole directory tree is under the auspisis of the FHS. If you put a random directory within that tree, at some point there could be conflict. There are four places within the directory tree you could place your /store and be out of the way of the debian system: /home/store assuming you never create a user named 'store' /usr/local/share/store since ISOs are basically static, its similar to putting a document under /usr/local/share/doc /var/local/store If you are frequently adding and removing files from store, it should go under /var (variable) since the idea of /usr is that it _can_ be mounted read-only. If its files to be placed by users (a communal bookshelf), I would put it under /home If its files to be placed by admin/root/whatever, to be read by users, I would put it under /var/local In any event, I would _not_ put it as /store. Doug. -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]