On 30/09/2013 01:31, Daniel Campbell wrote:
> Curious; how is merging two filesystems done? I don't have a separate > /usr and am completely unaffected by this change, but it's somewhat > interesting to me. /usr stores some pretty important data on it, and I > imagine you'd need to mount it somewhere else in order to move the > files from it to /'s /usr dir. Is a Live environment recommended > instead? How would you mitigate the leftover partition, assuming it's > not adjacent to /'s partition? Because /usr is continually in use, boot using a livecd of your choice. In that environment, use fdisk (or whichever *disk you like) to make any changes to partitions you know you will need. Mount your gentoo / somewhere convenient Mount your gentoo /usr somewhere convenient copy the latter over to the former edit fstab reboot It really is just a case of moving a large number of files around, but because those very files are always in use you have to do it in livecd environment. There's no exact checklist one can follow to guarantee a 100% result blindly. Instead, as this is Gentoo, we assume users built their system knowing what they were doing and can appropriately deal with their config themselves. RAID and LVM for example may need attention, but the user is usually equipped to deal with that and knows what t do. > > I don't run an initramfs, thankfully, but I keep a pretty simple > system in terms of filesystems: /, /boot, and /home. > -- Alan McKinnon Systems Engineer^W Technician Infrastructure Services Internet Solutions +27 11 575 7585 -- Alan McKinnon alan.mckin...@gmail.com