>I don't this this will work tho I suppose you could export the file
>systems and mount them as NFS drives.  Why you would want to do this is
>beyond me...  Perhaps they could be mounted as localhost:/<dirpath>
>those this would probably be kind of slow.

I don't think so. (the idea, not the speed)...

>What's wrong with symlinks?  They can certainly be abused (just ask me
>:-) but are a very powerful tool for customizing a file structure. 

Because of their non-intuitive behaviour for directories. Watch this:

        mkdir real
        mkdir real/abc
        mkdir real/def
        mkdir pretend
        ln -s real/abc pretend/001
        ln -s real/def pretend/002

Got the picture? I need this, believe it or not. Now,

        cd pretend/001
        ls ..

what would you expect? I would like:

        001  002

but instead I get:

        abc  def

Were I to put /home and /www on the second disk, should I do

        chdir /home     # a symlink to /mnt/sdb2/home
        ls ..

I wouldn't see the contents of / (bin, etc, usr & co), I'd see the
contents of /mnt/sdb2, and that, frankly, is rather unsettling.

>Frankly I doubt the performance would be any worse than following a
>mount across disks.

A nanoscopical amount.

>Unless you are going to be thrashing this disk a
>_lot_, a couple of extra milliseconds or so per access isn't going to
>make any measurable difference.

Ok, I can live with that. Still, I don't like how the parent directory
of a symlinked directory is displayed.

>If you are going to wipe out the new disk and copy stuff over why not
>just mount it "normally?"  Create a couple or three partitions, mount
>them to /tmp_mnt to copy the data across, verify the copy worked,
delete
>the original trees, and change fstab to reflect the new file structure.

Because I am *not* going to wipe out the new disk. It is at a remote
location, in a different tz, so it's difficult to coordinate a tape
backup. It's also in use now, albeit it in a bit of a pigsty way.

Thanks for the input,
David


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