Over the past few days, I've been slowly getting my Debian system set up, and I have a quick question about mounting. On hdc, I had 128 MB of unpartitioned space, so I decided to make it another Linux partition and decide what to do with it later. It was the only Linux partition on hdc, so after installation, I decided to mount it as /lib, just so the disk wouldn't be totally idle. I mounted it as a temporary directory, copied all the files from /lib over to it, and then set it to mount as /lib in fstab. Now, my questions:
1. Are the original files from the /lib directory on hda1 (my /) still there, but just invisible because another filesystem is mounted as /lib, or are they gone? I didn't think it would be a very good idea to delete them before mounting the new /lib, because I worried that stuff wouldn't work very well without access to the lib files. 2. In the future, if I decide to use my 128 MB partition on hdc for something else, how should I go about that? Will everything break if I unmount /lib? 3. When installing Debian packages, I often see "Warning: /lib/somethingorother.2 is not a symlink". Is this because /lib is mounted on a different filesystem? Are there any consequences of this warning, or is it harmless? 4. Was mounting /lib on a different filesystem a completely dumb idea to begin with? What's something else I could put on my 128MB filesystem? Thanks for any help. I'm going to boot back into Debian & wrestle with X more & try to figure out why pine isn't working. Good day.