Path: utzoo!utgpu!news-server.csri.toronto.edu!rpi!usc!rutgers!cmcl2!panix!eravin From: eravin@panix.uucp (Ed Ravin) Newsgroups: comp.unix.aix Subject: Re: User Directories Summary: if /u you what you are /doing Message-ID: <1991Apr27.053157.13155@panix.uucp> Date: 27 Apr 91 05:31:57 GMT References: <709@aos.brl.mil> Organization: Newsaholics Annonymous Lines: 20 In article <709@aos.brl.mil> somsky@brl.mil (William R. Somsky) writes: >With the '/usr' partition sucking up almost the entire hard-drive on >installation, is there really any good reason for putting users on a >seperate '/u' partiton? Plenty of them. For starters, it's always nice to separate system programs and vendor programs from what your users are doing. I like being able to re-install AIX (which wipes out the / and /usr filesystems) without having any of my user's files affected. And system administration in general is less complex when your users and your system programs are on different filesystems -- for example, suppose a user fills up his or her directory with large files, eventually flooding the filesystem. If the user's directory was in /usr, then uucp spooling and a number of other daemons would grind to a halt. If the users were all segregated in /u, then that couldn't happen. -- Ed Ravin | I'm sorry, sir, but POSTAL REGULATIONS don't allow cmcl2!panix!eravin | PLASTIC tape over PAPER tape and NYLON cord on an philabs!trintex!elr | 86 inch girth to LITHUANIA... +1 914 993 4737 |