On Thu, 2010-07-15 at 17:13 -0600, Bdale Garbee wrote: > I interpret "corresponding subsystem is installed" to mean that the > kernel knows how to mount and use the filesystem type in question. Well I'm not sure whether this is actually meant... but this doesn't mean I think it's wrong ;)
> To > the best of my knowledge, that is not true for CP/M filesystems, which I > believe can only be manipulated from user space and not directly > mounted. I guess,... all comes down to, whether the corresponding filesystem can be mounted from fstab,.. because then you might need the fsck in /bin during boot.... > Also, the overall definition for /usr/sbin in the FHS says "This > directory contains any non-essential binaries used exclusively by the > system administrator." That is clearly not true in this case. ... and if those CP/M filesystems can be mounted like normal filesystems,.. essential stuff for booting might be on such a fs.... And then we'd need it in /sbin/ Cheers, Chris.
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