Le 24/11/2018 à 13:13, Roger Leigh a écrit :
(Like many, I used to routinely use a separate /usr on a separate partition, then LVM LV, until I really looked at the practice and questioned the real underlying problems which it was solving. I've not needed one in over a decade at this point.  I'm not particularly for or against having one.  It's simply ceased to be a relevant concern for any of the diverse systems I've worked on, from desktops and workstations, to cluster nodes, VMs, servers and container images.  None of them needed it.)


    Like you I did mount /usr separately for over a decade, with the idea that my OS would be recoverable if /usr was corrupted. Untill I realized it simply wouldn't. I tend to prefer, now to reserve a partition for another Linux OS. It could be a clone, of the main one, but I prefer experimenting with fancy things, even custom. Disks are so big nowadays that there is a lot of room for it.

    In my last install, I still had /tmp and /var on separate partitions, but I'm questionning the validity of such a setup.

        Didier


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