On Tue, Mar 04, 2014 at 01:52:19PM +, Darac Marjal wrote:
Boot speed isn't systemd's goal. It's just a side-effect.
Systemd's real goals are being event driven (so, for example, you don't
mount a file system until the device is ready - at the moment, debian
does this with a two-pass
On 05/03/14 10:36, Rob Owens wrote:
On Tue, Mar 04, 2014 at 01:52:19PM +, Darac Marjal wrote:
Boot speed isn't systemd's goal. It's just a side-effect.
Systemd's real goals are being event driven (so, for example, you
don't mount a file system until the device is ready - at the
moment,
On Wed, Mar 05, 2014 at 11:07:00AM +1100, Scott Ferguson wrote:
On 05/03/14 10:36, Rob Owens wrote:
On Tue, Mar 04, 2014 at 01:52:19PM +, Darac Marjal wrote:
Boot speed isn't systemd's goal. It's just a side-effect.
Systemd's real goals are being event driven (so, for example, you
On 05/03/14 11:34, Rob Owens wrote:
On Wed, Mar 05, 2014 at 11:07:00AM +1100, Scott Ferguson wrote:
On 05/03/14 10:36, Rob Owens wrote:
On Tue, Mar 04, 2014 at 01:52:19PM +, Darac Marjal wrote:
Boot speed isn't systemd's goal. It's just a side-effect.
Systemd's real goals are being
On Fri, 23 Oct 1998, Sergey V Kovalyov wrote:
Hi,
I have a wierd problem: during boot process mount fails with the following
message:
Starting portmapper... Mounting remote filesystems...
mount: RPC: Program not registered
I saw this once when rpc.mountd and/or rpc.nfsd on the server
I have my machine setup to mount a disk on another (Debian) linux machine.
Unfortunately when I was rebooting my system, the other machine didn't
want to serve me, so my machine hung with:
NFS server ottifant not responding, still trying.
Now the obvious solution is to fix up the other
On Mon, 7 Apr 1997, Steve Hsieh wrote:
Now the obvious solution is to fix up the other machine, but the thing
which worried me most was the fact that the attempt to nfs mount didn't
timeout. Which means that my system is entirely dependent on the other
system in order to boot.
I am
7 matches
Mail list logo