John Andersen
On Thursday 01 January 2004 18:41, Chuck Stuettgen wrote:
So if anyone has any more suggestions I would like to hear them. =A0In the mean time I think I'm going to send a message to Werner Fink at Suse the author of insserv and see what his thoughts are.
Run insserv -d and see what it does to your configuration. I think you will find it gets set back. Somewhere in the process this will get run and when you least expect it your system reverts to that which the scripts define by thier "required start" and "provides" lines.
insserv.conf (i think thats the name) gets involved too. There is definitly some bit missing from the docs. I'd be interested in what Werner says. I note that Mantel had a hand in some of these things as well.
The problem is caused by the syslog dependency -- if you either remove $network from syslog, or $syslog from pcmcia then insserv -d will obey the network's 'Required-Start: $pcmcia' line. (If you do remove $network from syslog you will probably have to replace it with $local_fs however.)