![]() There have been a number of reasons for this over the years, some better than others, but the simple fact is that there is no longer any reasonable justification for it, and it causes some confusion about "what goes where", often resulting in things being in both places. There are a few directories (bin, sbin, and a few variations of lib) which exist in both / and /usr. A lot of users might be unfamiliar with this what it does, in a nutshell, is clean up a mess that has been brewing in Linux (and Unix) for even longer than I have been working with them. Convert the filesystem by installing the usrmerge package (open a terminal window and type sudo apt install usrmerge). ![]()
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