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On 29/06/00 at 12:05 Thorsten Kukuk wrote: >On Thu, Jun 29, Thomas Bushnell, BSG wrote: > >> Dale Scheetz <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes: >> >> > On 28 Jun 2000, Thomas Bushnell, BSG wrote: >> > >> > > >> > > /misc has the disadvantage of having nothing to do with what any >> > > existing system uses. >> > > >> > > All of the ones I know either directly mount on subdirs of /, or mount >> > > on subdirs of /mnt. >> > > >> > Debian uses /floppy and /cdrom, so /mnt is left alone. I have used it for >> > several years, placing subdirectories within /mnt on which I mount the >> > other partitions I add to root. These are permanent mounts set up in >> > fstab, and I have never had any other software try to remount them, or >> > overmount something on /mnt. >> >> Yes. This contradict what I said. Debian uses subdirectories of /. >> Red Hat and Solaris and Irix use subdirectories of /mnt. I have no > >This is wrong. Red Hat uses /mnt. Solaris 7 has /cdrom and uses /vol >for the volume manager. I'm not sure about Irix, but as far as I know >they also don't use subdirectories in /mnt. > FWIW as i know this has been going round and round for a bit, if we all remember back as newcomers to Linux, these schemes are quite cryptic, why there is /mnt instead of, /mount is very confusing and not self explanitory. Seeing all this discussion in the end is to make things probably easier for newcomers, it *needs* to be somewhat self explanitory, if what we have in place today is all over the shop, lets make a standard that make some sense, at least in English (I cannot speak for other languages) /cdrom for the first CD player etc /cdrom2 numbering as required for extra devices /floppy for first floppy device (whose days must be numbered) /vol makes sense somewhat because is in line with a lot of OS's , the numbering pattern could be the same here or start straight at 1 etc etc for NFS it could be /net , in the vol and net uses it may possibly be better to number them straight up, because if using them are more likely to have more than one, and you are possibly way past the newcomer stage where mounting a CD rom is a chore and learning experience. Now, if its not to make life as a newbie easier, then any darned format would do ! pull the available options from a hat :-) Regards Greg Wright -- IT Consultant Sydney Australia PH 0418 292020 Available for Global Contracts Int. +61 418 292020 web http://www.ausit.com e-mail greg AT ausit.com Trading As - AAA Computers, ITpro, Ozzie Soft, providers of IT services.
