On 04/13/2011 12:03 PM, Jon Elson wrote:
> Mark Wendt wrote:
>> The /boot dir holds the Linux boot images and remains static only as
>> long as you don't upgrade your version of the system.  The /root
>> partition only remains static if you don't su or log in as root (that's
>> it's home dir...)  If your /usr partition gets corrupted, at least on a
>> linux box, you may not even be able to boot single user, since a lot of
>> the system binaries and libraries live there.
>>
> Yes, when I wrote that, I was thinking more of /home than /usr.  Yes, if
> the /usr fs is mangled,
> you would be able to boot the kernel, but not do a lot past that.  So,
> keeping /usr on a different
> partition from  /home and /var would give some protection.  Lately,
> though, file systems have
> gotten quite robust, I haven't had real corruption problems in a long time.
>
> Jon

Yeah, me neither.  With ext4 being a journaling file system, corrupt 
files have pretty much become a thing of the past.

Mark

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