El 24/01/13 17:01, Linda Walsh escribió:
What about local startup scripts. I have a few to start services and monitor things of my own.
Please read what I've said above. I stated that "early boot sysv scripts" are no longer supported in upcoming systemd versions, this scripts are provided by distributions to setup stuff *before* any user provided scripts are even taken into consideration.
That's one thing that seems to be a pain with the new systemd service, is that writing a shell script is pretty much standard SysAdmin knowledge. But is configuring a non-standards-compliant service like systemd going to be something so easily configured?
Another problem I've been having lately is being unable to boot unless I first boot into 'S' and mount /usr.
both /boot and /usr are mounted by the initrd (either created by old mkinitrd or dracut) I dont understand what problem you are facing exactly.
What file systems is systemd capable of mounting before it brings up the rest of the system? Or rather what other file systems besides /usr is it not capable of mounting? /tmp? /var/tmp? /var? /var/cache /proc? For that matter, why can systemd mount /proc and /sys, but not /usr?
Systemd only mounts either the pseudofilesystems itself requires to function or what you supplied in /etc/fstab or in .mount or .automount units. -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org To contact the owner, e-mail: opensuse+owner@opensuse.org