[Dan Jacobson] > Maybe add a comment mentioning: > For those of you using e.g., > tmpfs /tmp tmpfs defaults 0 0 > in /etc/fstab, this script (/lib/init/bootclean.sh) cannot be aware of > any files left on the original place where you mounted /tmp from that > day way back when you first started using tmpfs, using up disk space > all the way up till now, unnecessarily.
Well, I am not quite convinced bootclean.sh is the best way to teach basic file system skills. :) > You can see if you have any such files by using > # umount /tmp > # find /tmp -mindepth 1 > You could then remove them by hand, leaving of course /tmp itself. > Then put back the tmpfs > # mount -t tmpfs tmpfs /tmp A better way keeping /tmp intact in the process is to bind-mount / to somewhere else and remove the files in /tmp/ that way. Happy hacking, -- Petter Reinholdtsen -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to debian-bugs-dist-requ...@lists.debian.org with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact listmas...@lists.debian.org