Anton Aylward wrote:
There is a lot of /sbin that doesn't get used much; the same goes for /lib, /usr/[s]bin and /usr/lib -- and the subdirectories of /usr/lib. But it all depends... "Context is Everything" ... as I keep saying. Is this a desktop or a server? What applications?
My view is that there are things like _some_ fonts and _some_ icons/graphics that get used heavily, so perhaps parts of /usr/ and /usr/share need to be on fast access (but only parts!). Or are things like this cached? Globally or a per-user basis?
All files are cached, globally.
The way I see it we need to implement an overlay file system. There is a /usr/bin and /usr/lib on the SSD that overlays the fully populated version on the hard drive, and _somehow_ (!*!*!) the most used items get migrated up onto the SSD. SOMEHOW.
unionfs? -- Per Jessen, Zürich (22.4°C) -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org For additional commands, e-mail: opensuse+help@opensuse.org