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Date:      Tue, 21 Feb 2012 00:44:43 +1000
From:      Da Rock <freebsd-questions@herveybayaustralia.com.au>
To:        freebsd-questions@freebsd.org
Subject:   Re: /usr/home vs /home
Message-ID:  <4F425C5B.3040005@herveybayaustralia.com.au>
In-Reply-To: <201202181447.32623.erich@alogreentechnologies.com>
References:  <4F3ECF23.5000706@fisglobal.com> <3D08D03C85ACFBB1ABCDC5DA@mac-pro.magehandbook.com> <alpine.BSF.2.00.1202172316230.11247@abbf.6qbyyneqvnyhc.pbz> <201202181447.32623.erich@alogreentechnologies.com>

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On 02/18/12 17:47, Erich Dollansky wrote:
> Hi,
>
> On Saturday 18 February 2012 13:05:49 Lars Eighner wrote:
>> On Fri, 17 Feb 2012, Daniel Staal wrote:
>>
>>> I've never seen anything listing the main reasons for having /home under /usr
>>> though.  I figure there must be a decent reason why.  Would anyone care to
>>> enlighten me?  What are the perceived advantages?  (Particularly if you then
>>> make a symlink to /home.)
>> There may have been a historic reason, but now it is philosophical - trying
> when I got my hands for the first time on a BSD system, the machine has had several 5MB hard disks.
>
> I assume that what now is called partitioning came from the need to have several disks to run a serious system.
>
> And yes, it was possible to boot and run BSD with at least 20 users on several 5MB disks.
>
> Erich
Erich, can I be so bold as to ask what brand the disks were? And tax 
your memory as to when?

I came across an 80M disk a few years ago (at a time when 120G was the 
largest), and I was thinking I could use that to prop up my swap space 
by about 1 or 2% ;)

That one was a quantum I think...

During my tertiary education we used to get 2M of space as a user, I was 
always filling it up in a few sessions. But I digress...



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