Hello! Seems, a brief description is here: "These are intentionally undocumented internal parts of systemd. Very simply, therefore: --deserialize is used to restore saved internal state that a previous invocation of systemd, exec()ing this one, has written out to a file. Its option argument is an open file descriptor for that process. --switched-root is used to tell this invocation of systemd that it has been invoked from systemd managing an initramfs, and so should behave accordingly — including turning off some of the behaviour otherwise caused by --deserialize." Source: http://unix.stackexchange.com/questions/98128/what-are-the-systemd-command-l... 03.01.2017 23:25, John Andersen пишет:
On 01/03/2017 11:08 AM, Carlos E. R. wrote:
But systemd devs are not the first to do this. Other opensource projects had undocumented switches for many years. Systemd may have such switches for various things, bug tracing harness, etc. But when you find it used in a production distro you just HAVE to wonder WTF?
If Opensuse is going to use this it becomes THEIR problem to document it, even if systemd in their arrogance decide not to.
None of my other machines are using this except one: Solus/Budgie.
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