On 11 July 2011 18:26, Yamaban
Just as a two digit number plus a underscore before the name and you get even a simple and easy method of start order.
There's no daemon start order in systemd. systemd opens sockets, then starts the real daemon on demand when they're connected to. The whole advantage of systemd, is to avoid the inefficieciency and blocking inherent in defined ordering. The discussion likely confused, but it was enable or disable defaults per daemon, globally and how to override them, that was at issue. As each daemon likely has it's own config, the information seemed to be flags for on/off by default on an install, where some sane defaults (or simple configuration can be done during package install like Debian/Ubuntu try to). Sorry if I helped confuse you regards Rob -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse-packaging+unsubscribe@opensuse.org For additional commands, e-mail: opensuse-packaging+help@opensuse.org