A merger is when two or more entities become unified into one entity like two companies becoming one single company. So, /usr merging should require other directories becoming part of it. Googling brought me a question on Ubuntu forums which asked: "Are {/bin, /lib, /sbin} symlinks into /usr in Ubuntu?" If that is what is understood by this 'fearsome' unification then /bin, /lib and /sbin should become symlinks with their usual contents moved to /usr. A program should still be able to find files under /bin, /lib and /sbin provided there are no two different files with the same name. A disadvantage of the merger is a merged /usr requires more storage space than before. This should not be a problem with modern hardware that is more energy efficient, quieter, and smaller in physical size. Finally, a merger of a system base directory should not bring instability problems like the changing of an insufficiently debugged system core executable.
Problems may, however, arise with setups that specifically require /usr to be unmerged. Here, the question should be how frequent these setups are, and what role they play in setups that do not tolerate downtime. _______________________________________________ Dng mailing list Dng@lists.dyne.org https://mailinglists.dyne.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/dng