On Sat, Jun 4, 2011 at 18:04, Tom Gundersen <t...@jklm.no> wrote:
> On Sun, Jun 5, 2011 at 12:44 AM, Myra Nelson <myra.nel...@hughes.net> wrote:
>>>> and IIRC its not perfect supported on any distro for a variety of reasons.
>>>
>>> I run several SuSE machines with /usr on a separate partition. Works
>>> fine. And right now, Arch should also work.
>>
>> It is historical and the default disk set up for both FreeBSD and OpenBSD.
>> OpenBSD lists security, stability, and filesystem integrity as some of the
>> reasons for setting the system up that way. Don't know if it's correct or not
>> but that's the reason I set my system up the way I do.
>
> Pushed fix to testing.
>
> We will keep trying to support separate /usr (certainly in
> initscripts). As far as I'm aware both udev and systemd themselves
> support separate /usr.
>
> However, at least in the case of udev, third party packages might
> install udev rules that call binaries in /usr. This will probably
> happen before /usr is mounted.
>
> On my system, the packages that install udev rules which will not work
> with a separate /usr are: v4l-utils, alsa-utils and usbmuxd.
>
> There might be other ways things break except for through udev rules,
> but I'm not aware of any.
>
> Cheers,
>
> Tom
>

Tom:

My point wasn't to push any policy change. I'll follow what Arch wants
to do. My last post was simply an explanation of why /usr was a
separate partition historically, nothing more.

Myra

-- 
Life's fun when your sick and psychotic!

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