On May 27, 2012 7:19 AM, "Dale" wrote: > > Alan McKinnon wrote: > > On Sat, 26 May 2012 18:17:38 -0500 > > Dale wrote: > > > >> It > >> appears that /run is sort of a temp thing while booting and just sort > >> of sticks around after getting booted, since it is there anyway. Why > >> not use it? > > > > No, that is incorrect. > > > > /run is a deliberate design decision (and a damn good one that should > > always have been there IMHO) and it sticks around because it is > > supposed to. It's not an after-effect that just happens to be useful, > > it's the entire objective. > > > > Think of it in the same way you think of /dev, /proc and /sys: > > > > There are there, there are guaranteed to be there with certain > > behaviours, and you can't change that (neither should you want to). > > > > > What I was saying tho, since it appears to be needed now, since /var may > not be mounted yet, it was created and is used during booting up. Since > it is there, why not use it, even AFTER the system is booted. After > all, the files are already there since they were put there during boot > up. No need moving them and all that when they are already created and > available. > > Plus, as someone said, I think it was you in another reply, what if /var > fails to mount at all? At that point, it still works since /run is > there already. Since /run is on tmpfs, if it fails to mount for some > reason, you got issues already. ;-) > > I don't mind it being there, I just hope udev, or whatever else may use > it later on, doesn't get memory hungry. Actually, maybe some other > small directories could be placed there as well. The lock files would > be a good one to start with. Just thinking. May want to duck tho. lol > You mean /var/lock ? Hasn't it transmogrified to /run/lock now? Rgds,