On 12Oct2022 20:54, Jon Ribbens <jon+use...@unequivocal.eu> wrote:
On 2022-10-12, Jon Ribbens <jon+use...@unequivocal.eu> wrote:
On 2022-10-12, Joe Pfeiffer <pfeif...@cs.nmsu.edu> wrote:
Jon Ribbens <jon+use...@unequivocal.eu> writes:
on Amazon Linux:
$ which rm
/usr/bin/rm
$ sudo which rm
/bin/rm
Have some major Linux distributions not done usrmerge yet? For any that
have, /bin is a symbolic link to /usr/bin
The above example may just be a different ordering in $PATH.
I have immediate access to CentOS 7, Ubuntu 20, and Amazon Linux 2,
and none of those have done that.
Sorry, in fact they have done that - I misread your comment as being
that they had symlinked the executables not the directories. This seems
quite an unwise move to me but presumably they've thought it through.
I think that modern discs are so large these days that the scenario of
having a small critical /bin with a larger less critical /usr/bin on
another partition are behind us except in very niche circumstances.
Cheers,
Cameron Simpson <c...@cskk.id.au>
--
https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list