On Mon, 6 May 2024 at 15:42, Richard Lewis <richard.lewis.deb...@googlemail.com> wrote: > > Luca Boccassi <bl...@debian.org> writes: > > > Hence, I am not really looking for philosophical discussions or lists > > of personal preferences or hypotheticals, but for facts: what would > > break where, and how to fix it? > > cleaning /tmp or /var/tmp: users may lose files if they dont realise a > directory tmp can be cleaned without a reboot. something in /var/tmp > that's been in there for 35 days before an upgrade might be deleted > before the user reads the NEWS.Debian email, meaning they have no > chance to react). Maybe you could postpone the very first deletion > until after the next reboot? > > using a tmpfs: is there a risk of losing unrelated data due to more > frequent OOM killing random other programmes due to /tmp using all the > memory? is there a case to only use a tmpfs if the system has > "enough" memory?
Again, those are all hypotheticals, and one can construct similarly contrived thought exercises for most possible permutations of most configurations, and the answer is always the same: customize the configuration accordingly. Hence, not relevant right now. What is relevant is: which packages, if any, or which DSA-owned systems, if any, are actually affected and how?