> 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.

Reply via email to