On 20/04/17 04:06 PM, L A Walsh wrote:
I don't like sysd because it leaves me with a non-bootable system. You can't claim that's unfair when its the truth.
It may be the truth but then again it may be an emergent property from other decisions you have made that have painted you into this cul-de-sac.
As for your other remarks, you have to be thinking of someone else, as neither of your comments _could_ apply to me.
It seems that non of our suggestions, (putting modules in /etc/modules-load.d/ is one example) don't work for the context you have set yourself up in. What it boils down to, Linda, is that the context you have set yourself up in is far enough removed form the one9s) the rest of us are running that what works for the rest of us, works well for us, works quite easily for the rest of of us, don't work for you. So we're play a game of "There's a hole in my bucket" with you. Yes, but ... yes, but ... yes, but ... I'm sure you find it frustrating. I can sympathise. I don't want to, as I have better things to do, but I've been in this situation. One time was with an IBM AIX and it took my two weeks to escalate the situation to get through to developers in Texas where they replicated _exactly_ my configuration and another week before they admitted there was a problem and another month before they offered a patch. Many of us work to shrink out initrd and make systems load faster and all that. I look at the output of my 'lsinitrd' and I'm sure I could strip more out, male systemd do more in parallel. Perhaps I could defer mounting some partitions until services or user login needed them? Hmm that probably wouldn't speed things up much, the criticality is establishing a network connection. But that plymouth, that splashy stuff? How to get rid of it? Is adding it as an "omit" in /etc/dracut.conf the right way? -- A: Yes. > Q: Are you sure? >> A: Because it reverses the logical flow of conversation. >>> Q: Why is top posting frowned upon? -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org To contact the owner, e-mail: opensuse+owner@opensuse.org