A wikipedia article (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Systemd) provides a
tempting brief on systemd as a replacement for init. And if
isc-dhcp-server fails to start during boot in some cases because of a
dependency or timing sort of issue, then systemd sounds promising as a
longer-term solution.
Στις 24/08/2012 06:00 μμ, ο/η John Hupp έγραψε:
A wikipedia article (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Systemd) provides a
tempting brief on systemd as a replacement for init. And if
isc-dhcp-server fails to start during boot in some cases because of a
dependency or timing sort of issue, then
On 08/24/2012 11:00 AM, John Hupp wrote:
A wikipedia article (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Systemd) provides a
tempting brief on systemd as a replacement for init. And if
isc-dhcp-server fails to start during boot in some cases because of a
dependency or timing sort of issue, then systemd
Stéphane urged concentration on the two text configuration files. Alkis
Georgopoulos insightfully contributed in a useful post just prior to that:
It's possible that you have configured network manager with a user
connection, i.e. that your network is only started after a user logs in
[Posting this for the group for the revised focus of the question..]
OK, interesting.
But indulge me in some further probing. /usr/sbin/dhcpd is an
alternative to the isc-dhcp-server set up under LTSP? I ask that
because when I run the long /usr/sbin/dhcpd command on a different LTSP
On 24/08/2012, at 1:02 AM, ltsp-discuss-requ...@lists.sourceforge.net wrote:
[Posting this for the group for the revised focus of the question..]
OK, interesting.
But indulge me in some further probing. /usr/sbin/dhcpd is an
alternative to the isc-dhcp-server set up under LTSP? I