Feizhou wrote:
Ed Morrison wrote:
<snip>
If possible, get / to the state where it is mounted read only.
</snip>
Feizhou,
If you wouldn't mind, could you expand on this a little...i.e. how would you set this up? Consequences for doing so?
It really is getting /usr, /var and /tmp out of the way (them tmp directories) and then getting to a state where system wide configuration (/etc) is infrequent. The consequences will be the need to remount / to be writable for any system changes like adding a user or changing a config and then remounting read-only again.
Moving non boot services and their configs off / would help in this regard. _______________________________________________ CentOS mailing list CentOS@centos.org http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos
Awesome. Is there any documentation you could point me to on this?
Thanks,
Ed