All of the shells are on /usr/bin, and symlinked from /bin This makes it exceedingly difficult to boot when /usr is gone :) George Toft, CISSP, MSIS My IT Department www.myITaz.com 480-544-1067 Confidential data protection experts for the financial industry. Darrin Chandler wrote: > On Mon, Sep 04, 2006 at 12:21:57AM -0700, George Toft wrote: > >>>Traditionally, and still in spirit. Nothing in /bin and /sbin should >>>depend on /usr being mounted. If it does, then it's broken, IMHO. >>> >> >>Solaris is broken (by this definition). Solaris will not boot if /usr >>is unavailable. A certain bank here in town found that out the hard >>way. The I found it out also when I decided to move the /usr partition. >>Yup, box no boot with no /usr. Solaris 8, btw. > > > Well, it's hard to put *everything* on the root partition. But you > should be able to boot single-user mode without /usr and have a basic > functionality (some shells, fsck, mount, an editor or two, etc.) for > diagnostics, repair, and configuration. > --------------------------------------------------- PLUG-discuss mailing list - PLUG-discuss@lists.plug.phoenix.az.us To subscribe, unsubscribe, or to change you mail settings: http://lists.PLUG.phoenix.az.us/mailman/listinfo/plug-discuss