On Fri, 2007-09-21 at 10:32 -0400, seth vidal wrote:
On Fri, 2007-09-21 at 10:29 -0400, Rob Crittenden wrote:
> Matthew Miller wrote:
> > On Fri, Sep 21, 2007 at 09:19:43AM -0400, seth vidal wrote:
> >> As a sysadmin /srv is a useful thing - it's what most sysadmins do
> >> anyway - create a top level path where they mount the large, local disks
> >> and put all their data. So they know on every system if they hit /etc
> >> and /srv with the backups they'll have what they should be worried
> >> about. All admins may not call it /srv but they do something like
> >> it: /fs, /local, /data, /srv
> >>
> >> it's all the same result.
> >>
> >> so while your argument for not using it in the distro is fine -the
> >> reality is that this is what is actually done by sysadmins all over the
> >> world.
> >
> > +1
> >
> > Thank you Seth.
> >
> > /var is transient data. There should be nothing there that needs backups.
> > And users shouldn't look there for files they might edit.
> >
>
> Transient and not backed up? What about /var/mail, /var/spool/cron and
> /var/log?
From the FHS:
Chapter 5. The /var Hierarchy
Purpose
/var contains variable data files. This includes spool directories and
files, administrative and logging data, and transient and temporary
files.
Ralf