You're right.
On Feb 26, 2015 5:30 PM, "Jason Adams" <[email protected]> wrote:

> On 02/26/2015 01:19 PM, Ted Unangst wrote:
> > Naim, Halim. wrote:
> >> Alexander Hall <[email protected]> writes:
> >>
> >>> On February 26, 2015 7:36:08 PM CET, [email protected] wrote:
> >>>> I was upgrading my system today to the most recent snapshot (from a
> >>>> previous snapshot). The Upgrade process failed (After booting bsd.rd),
> >>>> with error 'uid 0 on /: file system full'
> >>>> I finally found out that the problem was that my /bsd was a symlink to
> >>>> /bsd.sp (I had modified it to test if the ehci error was present with
> >>>> the sp kernel). After deleting the symlink. and cp'ing /bsd.mp to
> /bsd
> >>>> everything worked as expected. I didn't find anyting in the archives
> >>>> about this, so I thought I'd share the experience.
> >>> Indeed. As you just found out,  absolute symlinks can cause oddities
> in the upgrade process.
> >>>
> >>> /Alexander
> >> Is this documented anywhere? If not, should it?
> > No. The number of ways you can break things is infinite. There's no way
> we
> > could make a list of them all.
> >
>
> Funniest and most insightful thing I've seen all week.
>
> --
> Those who do not understand Unix are condemned to reinvent it, poorly.

Reply via email to