On Sun, Aug 22, 2021 at 10:24:56PM +0100, Luca Boccassi wrote: > The point of the migration is that /usr/bin will be identical to /bin, > etc. If they are not identical, then it's not usrmerge as it is > understood and has been adopted by many upstreams for a decade, it's > something else that is incompatible with it.
I'll note that people on this thread are using usrmerge in different senses of the word. For simplicity's sake, what I've tried to do in my posts is to refer to "usrmerge" as meaning the creations of top-level symlinks at /{bin,lib,sbin} pointing /usr//{bin,lib,sbin}. This is the specific proposal made here: https://www.freedesktop.org/wiki/Software/systemd/TheCaseForTheUsrMerge/ ... and in Debian, see: https://wiki.debian.org/UsrMerge So I think there is some justification to using to usrmerge only to refer to the top-level symlinks approach. A more general term might be "/usr unification", quoting from a 2012(!) LWN article: "/usr unification" (or simply "usrmove") is the idea of moving the contents of /bin, /lib, and related root-level directories into their equivalents under /usr. - https://lwn.net/Articles/483921/ After moving the contents of /{bin,lib,sbin}/* to their equivalents under /usr, the next question is whether we stop things from breaking? By using top-level sytmlinks, which many call "usrmerge", or creating symlink farms in the directories /{bin,lib,sbin}, for which I try to use the more awkward construction, "/usr unification via symlink farms"? Admittedly, "/usr unification via symlink farms" is awkward, but I've been hoping we can declare consensus that using symlink farms is undersirable way of trying to achieve /usr unification, since it wastes a lot of on-disk inodes, and there is complexity involved in needing to keep the symlink farm up-to-date as new files are created in /usr/{bin,lib,sbin}. But in any case, perhaps it would simplfy the discussion if we try to stick with consistent terminology? So what if we were to use usrmerge to unambiguously mean achieving /usr unification via top-level /{bin,lib,sbin} to /usr/{bin,lib,sbin} and considering symlink farms as being another (although IMHO, inferior) way accomplishing the goal of /usr/ unification? - Ted