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Date:      Sat, 18 Feb 2012 14:47:32 +0700
From:      Erich Dollansky <erich@alogreentechnologies.com>
To:        freebsd-questions@freebsd.org
Cc:        Daniel Staal <DStaal@usa.net>, Lars Eighner <lars@larseighner.com>
Subject:   Re: /usr/home vs /home (was: Re: One or Four?)
Message-ID:  <201202181447.32623.erich@alogreentechnologies.com>
In-Reply-To: <alpine.BSF.2.00.1202172316230.11247@abbf.6qbyyneqvnyhc.pbz>
References:  <4F3ECF23.5000706@fisglobal.com> <3D08D03C85ACFBB1ABCDC5DA@mac-pro.magehandbook.com> <alpine.BSF.2.00.1202172316230.11247@abbf.6qbyyneqvnyhc.pbz>

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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



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