> * /root was initially on a root partition because 'root' user should be > able to login even when all other FS (including /usr) are not mounted. > Since now it can't do anything without /usr anyway, /root dir don't have > to be in /. As an example of why this is a bad idea... I have a file server that, until recently, had /usr on an LVM so it could be dynamically resized. Sometimes, the machine would unexpectedly reboot and be unable to bring the VGs up. The repair scripts were in ~root. I would boot the rescue disk, ro-mount /, and run the repair scripts. If ~root were in the VG somewhere I would not have been able to repair the system. -- devel mailing list devel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx https://admin.fedoraproject.org/mailman/listinfo/devel