On Wed, Feb 09, 2005 at 07:53:42PM -0500, Kanwar Ranbir Sandhu wrote: > When someone says the "root filesystem", I automatically think of / and > everything installed on it (/root, /usr, /etc, /var and so on, excluding > of course /boot and swap) in one partition. > > I usually setup my systems like so: > > /boot /dev/sdXX > /root /dev/sdXX > /usr /dev/sdXX > /etc /dev/sdXX > /var /dev/sdXX > /home /dev/sdXX > /tmp /dev/sdXX /root, /etc, /bin, and /sbin should be on the root filesystem, not separated. That's why they're their own partitions. That way, if something goes wrong mounting other filesystems, you still have the basic utilities needed to fix it. > In this scenario, what would the root filesystem be? Everything else > that doesn't have it's own partition? Does it still refer > to /usr, /etc, /var etc., even though they reside on their own > partitions (I'm thinking it's this last one)? It'd still be /, which would (assuming you didn't follow the advice above), be empty except for containing mountpoints. -- Matthew Miller mattdm@xxxxxxxxxx <http://www.mattdm.org/> --> Fedora Users & Developers Conference, hosted by Boston University <-- February 18th, 2005 <http://fedoraproject.org/fudcon/>