Anton Aylward wrote:
If I were to unlink and move back those binaries and put in a reverse link, say, do you imagine it would affect my system? I think not.
Not irrelevant, as the reason for doing it was systemd that needed to have /usr mounted at boot. It *would* affect my system, since /usr is a secondary mount ... if all the files to process boot state are not on root, my system won't boot. Moving files off to /usr and leaving turds in /bin and /sbin where binaries used to be or forcing deps on /usr/lib[64], was unnecessary and poor design. I still have to run remedial scripts after updating suse software to check if root has any deps on /usr. The fact that systemd couldn't even handle a simple file config without creating incompatibilities, highlights its adaptability -- and why it's a problem. -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org To contact the owner, e-mail: opensuse+owner@opensuse.org