It might be a misunderstanding of my part. But reading the blog post it seems like you need to do a few actions even if you want to keep /tmp on disk.
Cheers,
Francisco
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Le mardi 18 août 2020 07:59, The Undertaker
Thank you for pointing that blog post out, I did not know about the change. That being said, I am not sure if that is relevant as the post is for july 27th!
Personally I did not follow the blog post, since of course I did not know of the change, and because I fall under the type of people who need /tmp partition on disk rather than loaded into memory so I see no reason why I should change anything at the moment.
cheers.
On Tue, 18 Aug 2020 at 10:16, contact@ffreitas.io contact@ffreitas.io wrote:
Did you follow the blog post about the migration to tmpfs for /tmp partition [1] ? Maybe it's correlated. Regards, Francisco [1] : https://kubic.opensuse.org/blog/2020-07-27-tmp_on_tmpfs/ Le mar., août 18, 2020 à 06:57, The Undertaker takertxgs4@gmail.com a écrit : I would like to confirm this, I started seeing this very exact behaviour earlier as well. On Tue, 18 Aug 2020 at 07:58, Jim Heald james.r.heald@gmail.com wrote:
Hello! I don't know how to communicate "where" the breakage occurred, but with my latest snapshot (which was 10x bigger than my other snapshots, at 206MB) I observed the following behavior:
1. `/tmp` somehow became a mountpoint for `/`. As such, ls'ing /tmp and / returned the same results, and /tmp became ro, breaking some of my Docker services
2. `sudo` took an unreasonable amount of time. Before I decided to just become root, running something trivial such as `sudo echo hi` took 25 seconds (I typed my password in a previous sudo command)
I would also like to add a few other points that I have observed in this case, though still not having any idea what went wrong here.
1. The system is generally slower in doing pretty much everything now compared to before the update, that includes booting, logging in, and running commands in general.
2. upon boot, and before showing the login prompt, I know receive 5 lines of "failed to start login service" and one line of "failed to start NTP client/server"
3. My HPE Gen 10 DL380 server is in a small server room on a different floor, but now the NICs don't initiate anymore and I can only service it in person or through the HP iLO rather than remotely.
4. The only out of the ordinary prompt during the update process that I noticed was:
"(33/70) Installing: gtk3-tools-3.24.22-1.1.x86_64 [...............done] Additional rpm output: update-alternatives: warning: forcing reinstallation of alternative /usr/bin/gtk-update-icon-cache-3.0 because link group gtk-update-icon-cache is broken update-alternatives: warning: skip creation of /usr/share/man/man1/gtk-update-icon-cache.1.gz because associated file /usr/share/man/man1/gtk-update-icon-cache-3.0.1.gz (of link group gtk-update-icon-cache) doesn't exist" but I don't have any clue how that pertains to this issue, if at all.
Doing `transactional-update rollback last` worked flawlessly,
In my case I rebooted > Start bootloader from read-only snapshot > chose the previous working snapshot > ran "snapper rollback" when system successfully rebooted. Anything I can help with, count me in as well.
Cheers.
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