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Date:      Mon, 24 Nov 2003 14:40:30 -0800
From:      "David O'Brien" <obrien@freebsd.org>
To:        Tim Kientzle <kientzle@acm.org>
Cc:        freebsd-current@freebsd.org
Subject:   Re: HEADS UP: /bin and /sbin are now dynamically linked
Message-ID:  <20031124224030.GB67578@dragon.nuxi.com>
In-Reply-To: <3FC2655A.8080202@acm.org>
References:  <FPEBKMIFGFHCGLLKBLMMCEDCCDAA.ghelmer@palisadesys.com> <3FBE8D92.6080205@acm.org> <20031123012222.GB11523@dragon.nuxi.com> <p06002003bbe5c0f30237@[10.0.1.2]> <20031123042635.GB677@saboteur.dek.spc.org> <3FC16644.7070005@acm.org> <20031124114006.GA60761@dragon.nuxi.com> <p06002002bbe7fd7ac23c@[128.113.24.47]> <3FC2655A.8080202@acm.org>

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On Mon, Nov 24, 2003 at 12:08:58PM -0800, Tim Kientzle wrote:
> Contrary to what David claims, I don't think /rescue does need
> to support all of the recovery actions that a static /s?bin
> would support.  Rather, I think it only needs to support those
> recovery actions necessary to repair /bin and /sbin if they break.

No, you're missing my stance.  My stance is that no failure mode needs to
be repairable that wasn't repairable with a static /.  With a static /
last month, if I needed to get a file onto the machine, I had to use a
floppy, CDROM, or mount another file system (NFS counts in this).

The argument flowing in this thread is about adding additional ways to
repair a trashed machine.  Those of us that agreed to the /rescue bloat
didn't agree to that.  We agreed to the claim that /rescue would hold
those bits needed to repair a trashed system in the SAME ways one did
with a static /.

-- 
-- David  (obrien@FreeBSD.org)



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