From mboxrd@z Thu Jan 1 00:00:00 1970 Return-Path: Received: from lists.gentoo.org (pigeon.gentoo.org [208.92.234.80]) by finch.gentoo.org (Postfix) with ESMTP id 011ED1381FB for ; Fri, 28 Dec 2012 17:35:08 +0000 (UTC) Received: from pigeon.gentoo.org (localhost [127.0.0.1]) by pigeon.gentoo.org (Postfix) with SMTP id 35C2921C10B; Fri, 28 Dec 2012 17:34:54 +0000 (UTC) Received: from mout.perfora.net (mout.perfora.net [74.208.4.195]) (using TLSv1 with cipher RC4-SHA (128/128 bits)) (No client certificate requested) by pigeon.gentoo.org (Postfix) with ESMTPS id E2B5321C059 for ; Fri, 28 Dec 2012 17:33:45 +0000 (UTC) Received: from localhost (66-208-231-133.ubr01a.rte20201.pa.hfc.comcastbusiness.net [66.208.231.133]) by mrelay.perfora.net (node=mrus2) with ESMTP (Nemesis) id 0LqhVi-1TBR6l3FtS-00eQIB; Fri, 28 Dec 2012 12:33:43 -0500 Date: Fri, 28 Dec 2012 11:33:40 -0600 From: Bruce Hill To: gentoo-user@lists.gentoo.org Subject: Re: Should /usr be merged with /? (Was: Re: [gentoo-user] Re: Anyone switched to eudev yet?) Message-ID: <20121228173340.GC2369@server> References: Precedence: bulk List-Post: List-Help: List-Unsubscribe: List-Subscribe: List-Id: Gentoo Linux mail X-BeenThere: gentoo-user@lists.gentoo.org Reply-to: gentoo-user@lists.gentoo.org MIME-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain; charset=iso-8859-1 Content-Disposition: inline Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit In-Reply-To: User-Agent: Mutt/1.5.21 (2010-09-15) X-Provags-ID: V02:K0:uZ75OPdch3F5cAN6IlHan1TR6rfr6GZQWkxt7QJxwyD k/0e1iMlZ7QgpTn1fzfk77YLEMZnkOn/9S7FrWrdEPLPKM/d/T X4ShYj5e/FWUUz4UiyZGMS8M8pIgpe6Rti8IGkEo3ADnUM95Xx nutLuF8kacb6GCkE6gvu7o0jKsY5+AlG/Bisreyndhiy+N32f/ 6nX//YJzc342zL7NJD0UYBDgycA+SfIe4k52cE8TGWsuZyOOXr 1Yb3T+uHbtIsXiOaSbeinw0uafKztouGvYEO7DMeeWuCUfS9VT 6+aLk1p/4Ht5F3G7Le3f4ZwNCH5OS7iN+tcWAojWWbFzos9vEH 2CqsJel6btjguV31qreU= X-Archives-Salt: 608963b5-2d16-4c51-bfa5-6a8a13d7cf4f X-Archives-Hash: 3a1016e812bea206a2d0cc0cb2537749 On Sat, Dec 29, 2012 at 01:16:34AM +0800, Mark David Dumlao wrote: > TLDR: FHS is unrealistic about its promises. if we move our binaries / > libraries to /usr and work it to make sure /usr is mounted, we will > better serve FHS goals and also happen to fix some systemic, but > silent bugs. > > > On Fri, Dec 28, 2012 at 12:20 PM, Michael Mol wrote: > > On Thu, Dec 27, 2012 at 5:37 PM, Mark David Dumlao > > wrote: > >> Second, going back to problem solving in general - just because you > >> can put down in words what you think the problem is, doesn't mean > >> you've mapped out an accurate or even consistent statement of the > >> problem. There really are cases where it's not enough to just give > >> general airy abstractions and rules of thumb to map out a problem, > >> where it isn't obvious that you're running into edge cases until you > >> really look at it deeply, and yes, the / and /usr split is one of > >> them. > > > > So let's look at it deeply, since nobody else will. I'm game. This is the > > most detailed technical discussion of the problem anyone's cared to > > actually have, as far as I've been able to observe. > > For the purposes of clarity I'm going to compare two competing > standards, which I will be identifying as follows: > > s1) "FHS", or "plain FHS", based on FHS2.3, as identified in > http://www.pathname.com/fhs/pub/fhs-2.3.html > s2) "merged FHS", or "merged standard", based on FHS2.3 as above, but > with the caveat that all binaries and libraries are placed in /usr > instead of being split between /usr and /, as described by > http://www.freedesktop.org/wiki/Software/systemd/TheCaseForTheUsrMerge > > It will be helpful to examine how each system reacts to strange cases > that challenge FHS. > > I think some of the following considerations are helpful in > determining which one works better. Whichever one is emphasized > conspicuously depends on which systems you're interested in > maintaining, how many people are using them, your personal taste, > sense of justice, etc. Perhaps you could add some of your own. > g1) Primary FHS purpose: software/users can predict location of > installed files and directories > g2) make distro maintainers' job easier > g3) make sysads' job easier > g4) it does not directly conflict with general practice > > It is my contention that in all goals, merged FHS is better than plain > FHS. Secondly, it is also my contention that plain FHS with a separate > /usr does not give enough information to reliably satisfy its own > primary goal (g1). Back to the cases below. > > > > ========================================= > === FUNDAMENTAL PROBLEM: / and /usr desync === > ========================================= > Thesis: FHS promise of /usr being sharable is not really deliverable > unless it contains the libraries in /. > > >>>> And the "we have a standard" part is effectively not true anymore, on > >>>> the matter of the / and /usr split. That is - what the specification > >>>> says should happen is not happening, on a massive scale, because it > >>>> turns out that it's not that trivial to determine which binaries go in > >>>> / and which go in /usr. > >>> > >>> Give me an example, and I'll describe a reasonably detailed solution. > >>> It would be my pleasure. > >> > >> The most fundamental and relevant one for us Gentoo users is this: > >> - how can /usr be sharable among different hosts if it depends on > >> libraries in /? > >> > >> """ > >> http://www.pathname.com/fhs/pub/fhs-2.3.html#THEUSRHIERARCHY > >> > >> Purpose > >> > >> /usr is the second major section of the filesystem. /usr is shareable, > >> read-only data. That means that /usr should be shareable between > >> various FHS-compliant hosts and must not be written to. Any > >> information that is host-specific or varies with time is stored > >> elsewhere. > >> """ > >> > >> Many distros place fundamental libraries that many programs in /usr > >> depend on in /lib. Especially bad for Gentoo - libraries in /lib may > >> be recompiled as same-version variants if you want to change the USE > >> flags, resulting in clients that don't synchronously recompile their > >> own libraries in /lib to both silently and noisily fail. > >> > >> In other words, many programs in /usr in practice are functionally > >> inseparable from the libraries in /, conflicting with the notion that > >> they were properly shared in the first place. > > > > There are certain implicit assumptions made in the spec that are important. > > > > First, it's assumed the binaries are compatible with all the hosts. It's > > assumed you're not sharing s360 binaries with x86 hosts, or sparc binaries > > with ppc hosts. > > > > From there, it's reasonable to assume that the authors of the spec assume > > the administrator to be smart enough to not do things like: > > * Mix compiler versions > > * Mix program compile options > > * Place a dependency on a binary that's going to be missing. > > > > The spec is very, very much a "do what you want within these guidelines; > > don't shoot yourself in the foot" thing, it's very much not a declarative > > bikeshedding of everything related to it. > > Unfortunately, FHS actually does explicitly specify the meaning of shareable. > > http://www.pathname.com/fhs/pub/fhs-2.3.html#THEFILESYSTEM > > """"Shareable" files are those that can be stored on one host and used > on others. "Unshareable" files are those that are not shareable. For > example, the files in user home directories are shareable whereas > device lock files are not.""" > > Here I take the meaning "stored on one host and used on others", in > the case of an executable, to mean "stored on one host and > successfully executed on others". > > I think it is plainly obvious that binaries are not usable on other > hosts unless they come with exact libraries they were compiled for. As > far as the user is concerned, the library and the binary are two parts > of the same thing, except that the library is stored in such a way > that memory / disk space is minimized because it can be loaded > multiple times. > > Following the above reasoning, to properly satisfy plain FHS, basic > libraries such as readline, ncurses, gz, that various programs depend > on should at minimum have _copies_ in /usr. But even with that > satisfied, the client of the /usr share would still need to be > configured to use those copies for the programs in /usr, possibly > independently from its own programs in /. > > You say that the spec assumes that the sysad / distro will not "place > a dependency on a binary that's going to be missing". Placing the > library in /usr as well is the only way guarantee that for arbitrary > /usr clients. > > So compare the following shared NFS /usr setups: > > plain FHS > - some libraries are in /lib, with copies in /usr. > - clients using the /usr share need to be configured to use the > libraries in /usr over the ones in / (specifically only for the > libraries in /usr) > - distro maintainer has to determine whether library belongs in / or > /usr. If it belongs in /, a copy will also be placed in /usr. > - chance that sysad can accidentally unsync a client's / with /usr, > resulting in arbitrary unpredictable failures (hard to tell which > programs will silently segfault!) > > merged FHS > - only one copy of the libraries, all in /usr > - clients using the /usr share automatically use the libraries in /usr > without reconfiguration > - distro maintainer installs all libraries to one location only > - sysad cannot desync / and /usr. > > > If I were doing a shared-/usr-over-NFS setup, here's how I'd do it: > > > > 1) Have two NFS shares for /usr, A and B. > > 2) Have all my clients configured to draw from A. > > 3) Perform my upgrade on B. > > 4) Prepare my upgraded client image matching the data on B. Upgraded client > > image would mount B for /usr. > > 5) Replace my clients targeting A with clients targeting B. > > > > And tick-tock between A and B. Or proceed A->B->C, removing old shares once > > they're no longer needed. > > First, the reason you need this update procedure is that you're > compensating for the point of failure you're introducing with plain > FHS: manually having to sync / and /usr. Which is functionally just > one step of sharing /usr anyways. In other words, the fact of / and > /usr being separated is what's giving you all this extra work. > > Second, since you're doing an image upgrade instead of a system > upgrade, you're also complicating your process by having to either > redo your host-specific files in /etc or being dependent on additional > programs for reconfiguring each client based on mac address. Further > opportunities for accidentally shooting yourself in the foot. > > > > > And in any case, I wouldn't share /usr between images with different roles. > > That way lies madness. > > It might be a weird setup, but it isn't any more invalid than wanting > special performance characteristics out of having /usr separated from > /. > > Consider, for instance, that a classroom of thin clients all shares > the same architecture and compile farm, with some clients wanting to > boot to a "photoshop" class and other clients wanting to boot to a > "office productivity class". Students of each class would have > effectively different roles that might be set in the / image, but > there's no good reason for their software to have to be compiled > twice. > > > > ============================================== > === Where do udev rules belong? And the direction of udev === > ============================================== > Thesis: udev/systemd recommends the /usr merge because it fixes > subtle, silent bugs that nobody else wants to fix. We can have udev / > systemd try to work around these bugs, but right now merging /usr is > an available option. > > >>>> * some teasers: > >>>> [1] udev rules themselves being a case in point. I mean, do the > >>>> requisite binaries belong in /? > >>> > >>> Udev is a dispatcher. Actually, in substance, it's a piece of the > >>> kernel that resides in userland; it exists because it was decided back > >>> around the time of devfs that what devfs was doing is something that > >>> ought to be outside the kernel. In reality, it's effectively been a > >>> userland kernel-support process its entire life. > >>> > >>> What should probably happen is that udev should be fixed to defer > >>> hotplug events until a rules file is able to sucessfully handle it. > >> > >> This is an interesting idea for a fix for the udev subproblem. However > >> again note that the / and /usr split/merge is a bigger thing than the > >> issues that just happen to manifest in udev. Perhaps right now they're > >> giving up on it because they'd rather not waste time fixing a sub > >> problem when fixing the / and /usr split fixes udev with less effort. > > > > When we went from x86 to x86_64, we didn't consider it the processor's fault > > for badly-written packages misbehaving. As we went from 8-bit codepages to > > UTF-8, we didn't consider it UTF-8's fault for badly-written packages > > misbehaving. As we go from IPv4 to IPv6, most don't consider it IPv6's fault > > when packages start misbehaving. > > > > We say the package needs to be fixed. > > """...when fixing the / and /usr split fixes udev with less effort.""" > > > > > So what on earth makes this different? > > I think an analogy with programming languages makes this clear. There > are a lot of people that use terrible PHP security practices, and I'm > probably one of them on bad days. That doesn't mean that PHP is buggy. > > Yes, the delivered software, in the end, still needs to be fixed. > > Now the PHP devs have the ability to "fix" those bugs by twiddling the > default settings / behavior of PHP. Those things "fix" the bug by > changing PHP or its settings. OR they can add language features that, > if used correctly, will fix the bugs. Ditto udev. The udev guys can > twiddle the default settings / behavior of it to "fix" the bugs in the > udev rules. Or they can add udev logic that makes the bugs go away. > > Something _is_ special when you're talking about language features. > How much software out there is still using deprecated features in PHP > 4.x / 3.x? Heck, deprecated features in HTML4? > > It is a fact of life that "waiting for other people to implement a fix > on their broken software", in general, doesn't work. If there's a big > enough majority following some behavior, it's better to change the > default behavior to fix the bug. > > Which the merged /usr already does. Yes, it'd be nice to have extra > udev logic for detecting that rules can't execute yet. It isn't > needed, though, if you merge / and /usr. So hats off to eudev for > perhaps their most obvious coding target. > > > While I understand why *systemd* > > should care about badly-written packages with cross-mount-point > > dependencies, I don't understand why udev should, or why udev's direction so > > be so *completely* subsumed by systemd's direction. > > Because it fixes the same bugs. > > >> > >> On the other hand you can just edit the system so that the _default > >> setting_ makes it unnecessary to specify dependencies for like 99.xx% > >> of programs out there. > > > > And why is this a thing that needs to be done except on an as-needed basis? > > BECAUSE IT FIXES BUGS. > > >>> systemd does > >>> something interesting with its "After" clause; that makes perfect > >>> sense. And that's why I asked Canek why one couldn't write a systemd > >>> service file to treat /usr as a service > >> > >> Again, it's not enough to have just a passing understanding of the > >> problem and talk airy abstractions about solutions. You really have to > >> have an understanding of the problem space. > >> > >> systemd, for similar reasons to udev, is installed to /usr by default. > > > > Please, explain these reasons. > > systemd (or some of the stuff it starts) depends on some stuff in > /usr. This makes their placement in /usr technically FHS bugs (for > systemd systems) that the upstreams won't fix. > - locales > - some udev rules > - udisks > - SMART > - PCI database > - USB database > > (Actually some of those seem to kinda _really_ need to be in / > following plain FHS) > > That it happens to work is just either systemd or the relevant > subsystems happening to fail silently and gracefully. > > Placing systemd with all the other stuff fixes those silent failures > in the same way that placing udev with all the other stuff fixes bugs > in udev rules. > > Reference: (Warning: Lennartspeak) > http://thread.gmane.org/gmane.comp.sysutils.systemd.devel/1337 > http://article.gmane.org/gmane.comp.sysutils.systemd.devel/1350 > http://article.gmane.org/gmane.comp.sysutils.systemd.devel/1426 > http://freedesktop.org/wiki/Software/systemd/separate-usr-is-broken > > > > > Almost everything useful the kernel does depends on the presence of an init. > > Does that seriously challenge the assumption that init should be separate > > from the kernel? > > Only if the kernel's design goal was to do those useful things itself > (it isn't). One of systemd's design goals is to minimise boilerplate > code in its unit files. > > > > ============================================= > === Hypothetical: does client software belong in / or /usr? === > ============================================= > Thesis: we cannot predict which programs are needed for mounting > arbitrary filesystems, even though mounting "other filesystems" is > required in the root filesystem in plain FHS. > > >>>> [2] fuse-based filesystems allow an administrator the crazy > >>>> possibility of, for example, demanding that /home be an ssh > >>>> connection. Should the ssh client belong in /? ftp? substitute any > >>>> arbitrary client program. > >>> > >>> System dependent binaries and libraries aren't commonly placed in > >>> /home. Your better argument would have been fuse-mounted /usr...in > >>> which case it would be the administrator's responsibility to ensure > >>> said arbitrary client program is present in /bin, and its libraries in > >>> /lib. > >> > >> It's misleading to think that /home being in ssh is an issue, because > >> the point is that the purpose of the root filesystem is: > > > > Wha? *You're* the one who brought up /home in the first place. > > > >> > >> "To boot a system, enough must be present on the root partition to > >> mount other filesystems. This includes utilities, configuration, boot > >> loader information, and other essential start-up data." > >> > >> In other words, if /home is one of the "other filesystems" tools for > >> mounting it should, according to FHS, be in the root filesystem. > > > > Why would /home be "one of the 'other filesystems' tools for mounting"? You > > made a jump here I seriously don't follow. Are we talking credentials? That > > kind of thing that's usually kept under /etc. > > > > You are misreading the spec. FHS says that the root filesystem needs > to be able to check and mount "other filesystems". This doesn't mean > "the /usr filesystem or any place where executables lie", but "all > other filesystems", including /home. If /home were mounted as a > separate filesystem, then the root filesystem needs to contain > whatever binaries are necessary to mount it, whatever filesystem type > it is. > > It is following this logic that mount.fuse is expected to be found in /sbin. > > It is _contrary_ to the spec that any files mount.fuse depends on is > found outside of the root filesystem. > > As you've misunderstood the spec, I'll be dropping your comments on > this scenario being invalid. > > > I'm frankly unfamiliar with emacs-daemon, but (from what you say), it's > > either broken, or was never, ever intended to be run as an init service. > > > > I'll just drop this as it's not essential to the argument > http://www.emacswiki.org/emacs/EmacsAsDaemon > > > >> > >> Now you say that it's alright, in this case, the sysad makes ssh > >> available at /bin. But this undermines the primary FHS rationale: for > >> binaries to be in _predictable_ locations for both the sysad AND the > >> software packager. > > > > The sysad controls the package manager. Regardless of the distribution, > > package placement should _always_ be done via the package manager. This is > > why every package management system that exists is accompanied with a tool > > for importing other package management systems' packages. Including binary > > and source tarballs. > > > > Following this, for any distro to correctly FHS, there needs to be a > package manager switch to copy arbitrary packages (and dependent > libraries) from /usr to /. As of yet not implemented. > > >> Compare: if all executables were in /usr FHS would have no problem > >> locating the client binaries, because they're all in the same place. > > > > And defeats existing functional systems without valid purpose. > > What does it mean to "defeat existing functional systems"? Creating a > single merged FHS system on your network will make your other machines > explode? > > There is an upgrade path from plain FHS to merged FHS (copy and > symlink). I'd know, because I've done it on my box. > > > So compare the following setups with strange and unpredictable new > FUSE filesystems: > > plain FHS > - without knowledge of all fuse filesystems installed on the machine, > the sysad cannot determine if a binary should be in / or /usr > - binaries moved to / have the chance of confusing arbitrary sysads / > maintainance scripts that hardcode path /usr/bin > - package managers need a new unimplemented feature that tells > programs to be moved to /bin > - programs moved to / will also need _copies_ of requisite libraries > in /, independent of libraries in /usr > > merged FHS > - only one copy of the programs and libraries, all in /usr > - sysads / maintainance scripts will always guess correctly by > guessing /usr/bin/foo. > - no need to change any package managers > > > > ============================================= > === Hypothetical: does server software belong in / or /usr? === > ============================================= > Thesis: Just as you cannot determine which client software is needed > for mounting arbitrary filesystems, neither can you determine which > server software will be the dependency of some filesystem. > > >>>> [3] a fuse-based filesystem depends on a local network service being > >>>> started. For example, someone writes a crazy fuse mysql browser that > >>>> also is coincidentally mounted at boot time. Should the mysqld service > >>>> belong in /? ldap? substitute any arbitrary server program. > >>> > >>> And if an administrator decides to do this, it's his responsibility to > >>> make sure mysqld is located in /bin, its libraries are in /lib...and > >>> he's got to find some place other than /var for his database! By this > >>> point, you've gone so far into reducto ad absurdum I honestly can't > >>> imagine anyone apart from someone who has absolutely _no_ idea what > >>> they're doing landing themselves in that situation. > >>> > >> > >> More or less same as above. Since the admin is now manually moving > >> things around, the spec _fails to achieve its goal_. > > > > The presumption is that the admin would use the tools available to him to > > achieve his goals in a consistent fashion. We consider it an error for > > packages to be manually installed into /usr/ as opposed to /usr/local. Why > > would you think I wouldn't consider it an error for a package to be manually > > installed into /? > > > > *Anything* an admin does without the knowledge of his package manager is his > > own fault if it blows up in his face. This is why he is provided with a > > package manager in the first place. > > > > As above, the necessary action is unimplemented in any package > managers I know of. > > As you've blown yourself into a tangent avoiding the fundamental > question, this one goes more or less the same as the one with client > software. But I find that you're very myopic in what you are going to > allow in your Unix. Why, in a Plan9-like system it wouldn't be > uncommon for daemons to serve up a number of filesystems, and if > someone crazy enough makes a toy environment with FUSE it's not our > place to stop them from following the standard. > > ===================================== > === Hypothetical: Should sysad tools be in /? === > ===================================== > Thesis: Because the root user's home directory is intended for the > root user to place arbitrary emergency restore tools and information > in, it is possible for the root user to depend on tools that depend on > /usr being mounted. This creates an FHS violation for all those tools > that does not exist in merged FHS. > > >>>> [4] /root (which is why it's separated from /home) contains docs and > >>>> custom utilities used by root user for recovery. Unfortunately, > >>>> there's a lot of perl scripts there specifically for doing filesystem > >>>> checks / reports. Should perl be in in /? substitute any scripting > >>>> language. > >>> > >>> You quoted FHS. I'll quote it back to you: > >>> > >>> "/usr, /opt, and /var are designed such that they may be located on > >>> other partitions or filesystems." > >>> > >>> /root is ridiculously out of the question. /home isn't defended by the > >>> spec, but it's commonly enough separated that it's difficult to > >>> imagine someone making that error twice. > >> > >> /root is the home directory of the root user. If it's not available > >> there, it defaults to the root directory (/). The point being the root > >> user has its own storage that defaults to the root directory, > >> independent of /home or whatnot. > >> > >> http://www.pathname.com/fhs/pub/fhs-2.3.html#FTN.AEN1037 > >> > >> One good reason why it's separated from /home is because the root user > >> may download or store his own stuff there relevant to fixing that > >> machine. For example, post-install notes are often placed in /root, > >> which detail which packages were selected upon installation. Or while > >> performing lengthy system maintainance, the sysad may write down their > >> upgrade notes, or snip relevant tcpdumps, or what-have-you and store > >> them in the /root directory while the /home directory is unavailable. > > > > Of course. This is why /root as a separate filesystem is ridiculously out of > > the question. > > I _didn't_ say /root was going to be a separate filesystem. I was > _only_ describing /root for the purposes of clarifying why I expect it > to have the following contents: > > >> It is very conceivable for the /root directory to contain perl scripts > >> or whatever the sysad has downloaded in his adventures to grep through > >> his logs and find out what the heck is going on in his system and/or > >> repair it. > >> > >> Should perl be in / or /usr? > > > > Now that is a good question, if only because Perl traditionally _loathes_ > > being in /bin, for its own philosophical reasons. > > > > Now, as a practical matter? WTF are the scripts written in Perl? Or in > > anything other than sh? If they're intended for emergency use, they've got > > some pretty fat dependencies, and should probably be launched from a full > > rescue environment instead. > > The fact that Perl has fat dependencies doesn't mean that it > shouldn't, according to the spec, be placed in /. The fact is, in this > case plain FHS suggests that Perl be in /. It's that ambiguous about > it. This strongly conflicts with the history of Perl and general > practice, in a way that suggests that we'd rather break plain FHS than > follow the general practice (suggesting the plain FHS is in the > wrong). > > > If you need a Cadillac for bootstrapping and emergency maintenance, sure. > > But this is one of those scenarios that experience and good sense teaches > > you to avoid. > > Doesn't help the fact that it still violates plain FHS. > > > > ==================================================== > === Hypothetical: Can we tell portage to install to / instead of /usr? === > ==================================================== > >>> With a system such as portage, it should be entirely possible (with > >>> few code changes) to configure installation targets (/ vs /usr) on a > >>> per-package basis, and have that trickle down the dependency chain. > >> > >> Yes, that should be. In fact I think that's the cleanest way to push > >> through so far. Just add a USE=prefix-root to udev. > > > > Make it default. The change of default to /usr is what's ridiculously stupid > > about the current scenario. > > > > And, frankly, if this is as much an issue as it's described to be, then > > something beyond USE flags is necessary. A different per-package tunable is > > needed. > > I don't think this is going to be trivial to implement, though. Any > package moved to / is going to also need copies of any library > dependencies to /. I only wonder how linking / revdep-rebuild is going > to work. > > > > -- > This email is: [ ] actionable [x] fyi [ ] social > Response needed: [ ] yes [x] up to you [ ] no > Time-sensitive: [ ] immediate [ ] soon [x] none Dang, I got an ExcedrinŽ headache! No, it can't be fixed with NSAID, nor even morphine! It's simply and only able to be fixed (not solved) by ExcedrinŽ ! Now, after the big D, where's that "unsubscribe/ignore this thread" switch? :( -- Happy Penguin Computers >') 126 Fenco Drive ( \ Tupelo, MS 38801 ^^ support@happypenguincomputers.com 662-269-2706 662-205-6424 http://happypenguincomputers.com/ Don't top-post: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Top_post#Top-posting