systemd will warn you during boot if /usr is on a different
file system than /. While in systemd itself very little will
- break if /usr is on a seperate partition many of its
+ break if /usr is on a separate partition many of its
dependencies very likely will break sooner or later in one
form or another. For example udev rules tend to refer to
binaries in /usr, binaries that link to libraries in /usr or
* hook emergency.target into local-fs.target in some way as OnFailure with isolate
-* s/seperate/separate/
-
Features:
* introduce "x-systemd-automount" as alternative to the "comment=systemd.automount" mount option
* readahead: btrfs/LVM SSD detection
-* add seperate man page for [Install] settings
+* add separate man page for [Install] settings
* only add quotacheck deps to .mount units which mention grpquota/usrquota in the mount flags
static void test_usr(void) {
struct stat a, b;
- bool seperate = false;
+ bool separate = false;
- /* Check that /usr is not a seperate fs */
+ /* Check that /usr is not a separate fs */
if (lstat("/", &a) >= 0 && lstat("/usr", &b) >= 0)
if (a.st_dev != b.st_dev)
- seperate = true;
+ separate = true;
/* This check won't work usually during boot, since /usr is
* probably not mounted yet, hence let's add a second
* check. We just check whether /usr is an empty directory. */
if (dir_is_empty("/usr") > 0)
- seperate = true;
+ separate = true;
- if (!seperate)
+ if (!separate)
return;
log_warning("/usr appears to be on a different file system than /. This is not supported anymore. "