> The report is fairly easy to reproduce. Make the /usr filesystem > read-only in /etc/fstab, go to single user mode and exit back to > multi-user. I've appended a transcript.
This does not matter. It is your configuration. It is not the default. Can you make /usr readonly on 90% of other operating systems, without downsides? Then switch. The reality is that you can't, since it is your own brave configuration choice. You own it. > It's unfortunate that mounting /usr read-only is now a mis-configuration. It was never a valid configuration. Next up, you will ask for readonly /etc. Or readonly /var. Or readonly something. Or operation without half the files that are in /etc. Who knows. It is your change --> you own it.
