I only have 8GB on the Ubuntu system partition and I am running out of space, so I tried to move the /usr directory (which takes 6GB out of 8GB) to another partition.
I did not want to make a partition only for /usr, so I moved /usr to that partition and made a symbolic link named /usr.
When I restarted my computer, Wifi connection was lost, and Mozc Japanese Input Method did not work anymore. What is the problem with /usr being a symbolic link?
EDIT: I use Ubuntu 16.04, and both partitions are formatted ext4.
EDIT2: When I renamed /usr (in the same partition) and made a symbolic link to that directory, I also got the same problem, so I do not think mounting is the problem.
/etc/fstab? – Zanna Nov 06 '16 at 08:57cdpoints back to a dir above it. (oh in some systems like Hurd you can symlink /usr). – Rinzwind Nov 06 '16 at 13:46mount -o bind /usr/foobar /usr/bin. This mounts a directory (foobar here) over an other (bin, here), and often solve problems when symlinking won't do. – kik Nov 06 '16 at 13:49/usr/binoften isn't the biggest problem. Look at what is in/var, especially if you use databases like postgres, mongo, whatever. They usually are good candidate for extraction. – kik Nov 06 '16 at 13:51