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NetBSD-current Is Now fully dynamically linked

jschauma writes "After quite some discussion on the current-users MailingList, Luke Mewburn announced that NetBSD-current is now, per default, a fully dynamically linked system. Please see his post to the list for details."

2 of 28 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Blech by forsetti · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Not being a NetBSD user, (but a BSD lover nonetheless) I'm not completely clear on this, but will this solve your disaster scenario?:

    ... from article ...

    Specific rescue tools are provided in /rescue, rather than overloading /bin and /sbin for that purpose.

    ...

    Are utilities in /rescue still statically linked?

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    10b||~10b -- aah, what a question!
  2. Get rid of /usr by amorsen · · Score: 3, Interesting
    Now, with everything dynamically linked and the rescue system properly moved to /rescue instead of polluting /, it is time to finally get rid of /usr -- or even better turn it back into the user directory it was always supposed to be. /usr/bin was invented way back when someone was running out of disk space in / and figured he could create a user account called bin (with home directory /usr/bin) and dump the extra binaries there. These days with logical volume management and overly large disks such hacks are no longer necessary.

    NetBSD has just removed the last excuse for having / separate. Only one more step, and the Unix file hierarchy is back to its root.

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