(doesn't 'usr' mean 'universally shared resources'?)
I thought it stood for userspace? Like all the non-kernel applications?
It was about machine-local shit vs shit that can be loaded from NFS for all machines in the fleet. Many distros symlink /bin and /usr/bin together
(doesn't 'usr' mean 'universally shared resources'?)
I thought it stood for userspace? Like all the non-kernel applications?
It was about machine-local shit vs shit that can be loaded from NFS for all machines in the fleet. Many distros symlink /bin and /usr/bin together