On 06/08/2015 02:00 PM, g wrote: > > > On 06/08/2015 11:34 AM, Kay Schenk wrote: >> On 06/07/2015 11:05 PM, g wrote: >>> On 06/07/2015 07:25 PM, Kay Schenk wrote: >>> <<>> >>> >>>> So, I'm not sure how to interpret what you said. Can I get the same >>>> results from a CentOS install using some combination of options? >>> >>> because your are playing with multi flavors, >>> [i bet you like going to baskin-robbins for ice cream ;-) ] >>> a solution for you would be what i did some years back and i was >>> playing with diff flavors, my "/home" partition was mounted in >>> new install as /home2 and i let installation setup a /home in /. >>> >>> after install and booting it, as root i moved the newly created >>> "user" home to the /home2 directory, renamed it to the 'user-flavor', >>> then linked that back into the install /home and renamed it to >>> "username" and changed ownership to "user" >>> >>> which then gave me: >>> >>> /home/username --> /home2/user-flavor >>> > only thing that some might call a disadvatage is > only thing that some might call a disadvatage is > only thing that some might call a disadvatage is >>> so that in /home2 i had: >>> >>> /home2/geo-fc3 >>> /geo-fc4 >>> /geo-mandrake >>> /geo-flavor-x > only thing that some might call a disadvatage is > only thing that some might call a disadvatage is >>> /geo-flavor-y >>> > only thing that some might call a disadvatage is >>> i hope you can see how i did this. i am of terse thinking and >>> do not always go into detail enough. >> >> Another creative approach and one I'd thought of also! >> But...not my first choice. > > did you do more than just think about it? > > just what do you want for a 1st choice? I think Peter addressed my concern and responded in a way that leads me to believe a /home2 as you suggest is not necessary since it will be bypassed in terms of any installation, which is what I want. > > advantages of /home2 is you have a user home directory for all your > flavors sitting in 1 partition that will not get erased because > you are allocating it's own mount point when you install. I do not have and do not want one partition for my system (files). I have ONE flavor with many partitions and mount points. A rather "old school" approach that's worked pretty well for me all these years. > > because you are using thunderbird for email client, you can set up > Mail, ImapMail, News paths in there own director, > > same applies to firefox bookmarks, passwords, certificates, etc. > such as; > > /home/moz/ > /moz/firefox > /moz/thunderbird > > then link them to your 'flavor' user directory. same goes for your > address book files abook.mab and abook-XX.mab, and other directories > and files that are not path critical. > > only thing that some might call a disadvantage is all moz progs will > be same, unless you happen to need something in an add-on that is > path specific. > > there are many other progs that are not 'hard set' with path names. > > -- -------------------------------------------- MzK "We can all sleep easy at night knowing that somewhere at any given time, the Foo Fighters are out there fighting Foo." -- David Letterman _______________________________________________ CentOS mailing list CentOS@xxxxxxxxxx http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos