Le mardi 19 octobre 2010 Ã 14:56 +0100, Matthew Garrett a Ãcrit : > On Tue, Oct 19, 2010 at 02:43:33PM +0100, Paul Howarth wrote: > > > This despite the FHS says (right at the top of Chapter 3, the Root > > Filesystem): > > > > /usr, /opt, and /var are designed such that they may be located on other > > partitions or filesystems. > > > > Do we *really* want to head this way, ignoring bugs resulting from > > having /usr on a different partition such as > > http://bugzilla.redhat.com/#626007, which is what led to this? > > What's the benefit in having /usr or /opt as separate filesystems? When one actually uses /opt, it really wants to be on a separate filesystem, so you can dump huge (gigs of binaries and other data) proprietary software there without polluting the (sane) base system It matters a lot when you have simple backup procedures for the base system that explode if you accidentally scope Oracle/SAP/IBM bloatware. Regards, -- Nicolas Mailhot -- devel mailing list devel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx https://admin.fedoraproject.org/mailman/listinfo/devel