And /net is usually autofs mounted.
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That's NFS shares? I might add that later although it's not very common or standard I guess. Thx
Yeah, nfs exports that can be mounted by HOSTNAME or ip address automatically with autofs. Sorry if that’s not standard, like my other comment about /mnt. I’ve never actually looked at the spec. I was just giving feedback based on what I’ve seen in the industry. So might not be spec compliant but a lot of it is common practice I’ve seen (for better or worse.)
What do you mean by locally vs site wide? For /usr/local that’s usually stuff installed from outside of the distributions normal packaging mechanism. E.g. if you build something from source using “make”, the “make install” would install it there by default (though that is also configurable.)
Also not sure we want to say /mnt is necessarily temporary. Any mount pionts there could easily be added to fstab.
The origin is that /usr
may be network mounted or otherwise shared across multiple systems, whereas /usr/local
is local to a particular PC. That definition is not as relevant with today's single-user machines, and now it mostly means what you said (/usr is managed by system package manager whereas /usr/local is manually managed).
The FHS says the thing about /mnt. It's not normally meant to have subdirectories or be mounted to by default.
Nice, but how do I zoom on mobile?