diff --git a/README-historical.md b/docs/README-historical.md similarity index 98% rename from README-historical.md rename to docs/README-historical.md index 732f8bdc..eebf5b2f 100644 --- a/README-historical.md +++ b/docs/README-historical.md @@ -1,6 +1,11 @@ -This file is outdated, but some of the text here is still useful for +--- +nav_order: 99 +title: Historical OSTree README +--- + +**This file is outdated, but some of the text here is still useful for historical context. I'm preserving it (explicitly still in the tree) -for posterity. +for posterity.** OSTree ====== @@ -49,7 +54,7 @@ Comparison with existing tools Now your system is in an undefined state. You can use e.g. rpm -qV to try to find out what you overwrote, but neither dpkg nor rpm will help clean up any files left over that aren't shipped by - the old package. + the old package. This is most realistic option for people hacking on system components currently, but ostree will be better. @@ -205,7 +210,7 @@ handling of binaries is very generic and unoptimized. In contrast, ostree is explicitly designed for binaries, and in particular one type of binary - ELF executables (or it will be once we -start using bsdiff). +start using bsdiff). Another big difference versus git is that ostree uses hard links between "checkouts" and the repository. This means each checkout uses