On Thu, 10 Jan 2008 10:40:02 +0000
Dave Howorth <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

> Jerry Feldman wrote:
> > In Tru64 Unix, the clustering system invented a context-dependent
> > symbolic link. This was added in Tru64 5.0. Since Tru64  Unix is
> > proprietary, the installer can force the /usr tree into the root file
> > system. I do know in Tru64 Unix 4.x you could place /usr in a separate
> > file system. 
> 
> As I posted earlier:
> 
> > Compaq Tru64 UNIX V5.1B (Rev. 2650); Tue Sep  2 17:51:37 BST 2003
> >
> > % ls -ld /bin
> > lrwxr-xr-x   1 root     system       7 Aug 22  2003 /bin@ -> usr/bin/
> >
> > % ls -l /bin/sh
> > -rwxr-xr-x   2 bin      bin     149840 Apr 15  2003 /bin/sh*
> >
> > % df -h
> > Filesystem         Size        Used   Available Capacity  Mounted on
> > /dev/disk/dsk0a    240M        208M       7666K    97%    /
> > /dev/disk/dsk0g   1923M       1335M        395M    78%    /usr
> 
> I guess the installer didn't force it to be in the same filesystem on
> our box. Or our sysadmin hacked it later for some reason :)

That looks like a CDSL. 



-- 
--
Jerry Feldman <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Boston Linux and Unix
PGP key id: 537C5846
PGP Key fingerprint: 3D1B 8377 A3C0 A5F2 ECBB  CA3B 4607 4319 537C 5846

Attachment: signature.asc
Description: PGP signature

Reply via email to