Op 6 jan. 2012, om 17:16 heeft Richard Purdie het volgende geschreven: > On Fri, 2012-01-06 at 09:04 -0700, Chris Larson wrote: >> On Fri, Jan 6, 2012 at 8:59 AM, Mark Hatle <[email protected]> wrote: >>> On 1/6/12 4:34 AM, Koen Kooi wrote: >>>> >>>> >>>> Op 6 jan. 2012, om 11:09 heeft Martin Jansa het volgende geschreven: >>>> >>>>> FWIW today I've noticed that systemd is going other way around >>>>> http://www.freedesktop.org/wiki/Software/systemd/separate-usr-is-broken >>>> >>>> >>>> And http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Features/UsrMove >>>> >>>> I guess it's time to publish my angstrom branch doing that after the >>>> holidays :) >>> >>> >>> I respectfully disagree with both of the above URLs. >>> >>> The root partition is still very useful as a "small" set of applications and >>> libraries required for booting. >>> >>> Most systems these days contain a combined root and usr partition, which is >>> fine. However, there are a lot of systems that I've worked on in the past >>> and I expect in the future that, root being a small R/O system is necessary. >>> >>> initramfs can solve some problems, but introduces other issues. Many of the >>> systems I've worked on simple don't have enough flash to be able to store >>> the bootloader, kernel and an initramfs [as well as other system items >>> required by the devices]. In this case a base rootfs makes the most sense. >> >> In my opinion, what's proposed in the two links is a good thing even >> for embedded. Not that we'd use that structure necessarily, but >> removing the usr vs non-usr separation for binaries and libs is a good >> thing regardless. Putting /usr in the rootfs still would still work >> fine, or you could drop usr entirely and move everything to / the way >> micro does. > > The nice thing is we have a system which can actually support the > different options relatively easily and without much conflict.
Except that things like fs-perms.txt store hardcoded values :( _______________________________________________ Openembedded-core mailing list [email protected] http://lists.linuxtogo.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/openembedded-core
