Unify /bin
and /sbin
Summary
The /usr/sbin
directory becomes a symlink to bin
, which means paths like /usr/bin/foo
and /usr/sbin/foo
will point to the same place. /bin
and /sbin
are already symlinks to /usr/bin
and /usr/sbin
, so effectively /bin/foo
and /sbin/bar
will also point to the same place. /usr/sbin
will be removed from the default $PATH
.
Owner
- Name: Zbigniew Jędrzejewski-Szmek
- Email: zbyszek at in.waw.pl
Current status
- Targeted release: / Fedora Linux 40
- Last updated: 2023-07-19
- [<will be assigned by the Wrangler> devel thread]
- FESCo issue: <will be assigned by the Wrangler>
- Tracker bug: <will be assigned by the Wrangler>
- Release notes tracker: <will be assigned by the Wrangler>
Detailed Description
The split between /bin
and /sbin
is not useful, and also unused. The original split was to have "important" binaries statically linked in /sbin
which could then be used for emergency and rescue operations. Obviously, we don't do static linking anymore. Later, the split was repurposed to isolate "important" binaries that would only be used by the administrator. While this seems attractive in theory, in practice it's very hard to categorize programs like this, and normal users routinely invoke programs from /sbin
. Most programs that require root privileges for certain operations are also used when operating without privileges. And even when privileges are required, often those are acquired dynamically, e.g. using polkit
. Since many years, the default $PATH
set for users includes both directories. With the advent of systemd this has become more systematic: systemd sets $PATH
with both directories for all users and services. So in general, all users and programs would find both sets of binaries.
One additional use of the /bin
—/sbin
split is consolehelper
. In this approach, the user-facing program (/bin/foo
) is a symlink to /bin/consolehelper
, which is a suid binary that elevates privileges and calls the "real" foo
(/sbin/foo
or /usr/libexec/foo
). Most uses of consolehelper have been moved to polkit (https://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Features/UsermodeMigration), but some users remain (https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=502765). Use of /sbin
for the privileged program is incompatible with the proposed merge; those packages will need to be adjusted (see Scope below).
Since generally all user sessions and services have both directories in $PATH
, this split actually isn't used for anything. Its main effect is confusion when people need to use the absolute path and guess the directory wrong. Other distributions put some binaries in the other directory, so the absolute path is often not portable. Also, it is very easy for a user to end up with /sbin
before /bin
in $PATH
, and for an administrator to end up with /bin
before /sbin
in $PATH
, causing confusion. If this feature is dropped, the system became a little bit simpler, which is useful especially for new users, who are not aware of the history of the split.
Many years ago we merged /bin
and /usr/bin
(https://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Features/UsrMove). In some ways that split was similar: it had historical justification that went away more than a decade prior, it was impossible to cleanly categorize programs into the the categories so effectively both parts were needed for boot, and even though it was making the system more complicated for little gain, the split was being carried forward because it was easier to do so than to remove it (http://www.freedesktop.org/wiki/Software/systemd/TheCaseForTheUsrMerge). This split is much less visible, but it's also making the system more complicated for no gain, and removing it is the natural follow-up.
Feedback
Benefit to Fedora
- Packagers don't have to think whether to install programs in
%_bindir
or%_sbindir
. - Users don't have to think whether programs are in
%_bindir
or%_sbindir
. - Fedora becomes more compatible with other distributions (for example, we have
/sbin/ip
while Debian has/bin/ip
, and we have/bin/chmem
and/bin/isosize
, but Debian has/sbin/chmem
and/sbin/isosize
, and we also have/sbin/{addpart,delpart,lnstat,nstat,partx,ping,rdma,resizepart,ss,udevadm,update-alternatives}
, while Debian has those in under/bin
, etc.)
Scope
- Proposal owners:
- Implement
split-bin=auto
in systemd: in this mode, systemd will check at runtime whether/usr/sbin
is a symlink to/usr/bin
, and if yes, behave like withsplit-bin=no
, and otherwisesplit-bin=yes
. - Adjust systemd package to build with
-Dsplit-bin=auto
. - Adjust
%_sbindir
in/usr/lib/rpm/macros
(part ofrpm
package). Packages will be updated automatically during the mass rebuild. - Add a
%filetrigger
to setup package to create symlinks to../bin/foo
for everyfoo
that is uninstalled from/usr/sbin
. - Add a
%posttrans
trigger to setup package to check that/usr/sbin
only contains symlinks and doln -fs bin /usr/sbin
.
- Implement
- Other developers: programs which user consolehelper and install the same name under both directories will need to be adjusted to use a different directory. Some of those packages may be retired instead. See list below.
Packages using usermode with binaries in both directories
anaconda-live
beesu
chkrootkit
hddtemp
mate-system-log
setuptool
subscription-manager
system-switch-java
xawtv
- Release engineering: #Releng issue number
- Policies and guidelines: https://docs.fedoraproject.org/en-US/packaging-guidelines/#_effect_of_the_usrmove_fedora_feature will need to be adjusted (and most likely retitled ;))
- Trademark approval: N/A (not needed for this Change)
- Alignment with Community Initiatives: nope
Upgrade/compatibility impact
The change should be mostly invisible for users.
How To Test
User Experience
Dependencies
Contingency Plan
- Undo the changes to macro definitions in
rpm
and rebuild some or all packages.
- Contingency mechanism: (What to do? Who will do it?) N/A (not a System Wide Change)
- Contingency deadline: N/A (not a System Wide Change)
- Blocks release? N/A (not a System Wide Change), Yes/No
Documentation
N/A (not a System Wide Change)