On 12/26/2016 03:34 PM, L.A. Walsh wrote:
We are talking necessary for boot. Not binaries. They were scripts called by udev if I remember correctly.
Forgive me, I don't have such instances on my system anymore.
Granted. And I have /usr/share as a seperate file system that gets loaded in the fine systemd manner asynchronously with /home, /opt, /var, /srv and /tmp. Good thing that there isn't a race condition. Maybe those udev script were simply in /usr/lib/udev or possibly the executable at /usr/lib/udisks2/udisksd See the man page for udisks. It says "At start-up and when a drive is connected..." What "at start-up" specifically means, in terms of 'during boot' or after the boot pivot to do something so that the other drives than the ROOTFS can be activated and mounted ... I'm not sure. I don't have a "/etc/udisks2/" on my system. -- The two pillars of `political correctness' are, a) willful ignorance, and b) a steadfast refusal to face the truth -- George MacDonald Fraser -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse-factory+unsubscribe@opensuse.org To contact the owner, e-mail: opensuse-factory+owner@opensuse.org