On Fri, Oct 28, 2011 at 11:47:04AM +0200, Harald Hoyer wrote:
On 10/27/2011 08:35 PM, Chris Adams wrote:
The strategy is:
- Replace binaries in /bin /sbin /usr/sbin /lib /lib64 with symlinks to
their counterpart in /usr. Symlinking is done in rpm %post. Symlinks are
part of the filelist with %ghost.
- As soon as one of these directories _only_ contains symlinks, it can
be removed completly and replaced by a symlink.
- The removal of the directories can either happen after the upgrade via
anaconda, or within the initramfs while booting or in shutdown.
- Fresh installations will get the toplevel symlinks immediatly and no
%ghost symlinks are created
Read the rpm snippet on the feature page, please.
Ugh. So you're proposing that all package maintainers with programs or
libraries in / will need to update their packages to carry the compat
symlinks and you're proposing that replacing the / directories with
symlinks has to be a special case outside of packaging itself? I'm sorry,
for the question, it's just that neither of these were clear from reading
the feature page. Perhaps if you add your middle two bullets from above to
the Roadmap section it will be more clear.
Also, your list of 257 packages is incomplete. For instance, you're missing
bash. Linking the script that you use to generate the list to the Feature
page would also be helpful.
Thanks,
Toshio