On Sun, Feb 09, L A Walsh wrote:
On 2020/02/04 10:06, Stefan Seyfried wrote:
Am 04.02.20 um 18:45 schrieb Dominique Leuenberger / DimStar:
On Tue, 2020-02-04 at 17:21 +0100, Axel Braun wrote:
in short: check /etc/nsswitch.conf; you very likely have a .rpmnew lying next to it. Merge the changes. Anything a package maintainer needs to do? No; this is all on users that ignore .rpmsave and .rpmnew files.
But if their system doesn't come up, how will they be able to look at them?
By looking at it before you reboot? Else you can still do a rollback.
Moving the location of standard linux config and administration files from /etc/ (only been there for about 50 years), to /usr has to be one of the less well thought out changes -- only if you have a suse-only system that isn't used for any user or customer purpose where they would have to load and/or configure any non-suse software might this possibly work and even then its a very dangerous move.
No idea since how many years you haven't looked at your system, but many, many distribution provided configuration files are today already widely spread below /usr. The most prominent one is systemd ...
Again, you break the source of things on 'root' and point symlinks off to /usr which may not even be mounted yet.
Mounting /usr after initrd is not supported with openSUSE. So yes, it will not work as of today. -- Thorsten Kukuk, Distinguished Engineer, Senior Architect SLES & MicroOS SUSE Software Solutions Germany GmbH, Maxfeldstr. 5, 90409 Nuernberg, Germany Managing Director: Felix Imendoerffer (HRB 36809, AG Nürnberg) -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse-factory+unsubscribe@opensuse.org To contact the owner, e-mail: opensuse-factory+owner@opensuse.org