On Wed, Jul 05, 2006 at 02:08:46PM +0300, Jari Aalto+mail.linux wrote:
| On Wed, Jul 05, 2006 at 08:52:28AM +0300, Jari Aalto+mail.linux wrote:
| >FHS 2.3 reads
| >
| >
<http://www.pathname.com/fhs/pub/fhs-2.3.html#BINESSENTIALUSERCOMMANDBINARIES>
| > /bin contains commands that may be used by both the system
| > administrator and by users, but which are required
| > when no other filesystems are mounted (e.g. in single user mode).
| > ============================================================
| [snip]
| >As Debian follows the FHS, the correct place here seems to be
| >/bin according to FHS. (as where "login" is also located)
|
| Could you please explain how nologin is required in single user mode?
I was more reading the mounting part if nologin resided on /usr/bin
Ok, still please explain. A system that doesn't have /usr mounted isn't
a system in normal operation. What about nologin makes it *essential*
for system recovery or otherwise required for a system in an
extraordinary state?
Mike Stone
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