Hi, For RHEL7 we have received complains from users that network filesystems are not unmounted before entering rescue mode. I guess this is because mount units have IgnoreOnIsolate=yes set by default. I think this is fine and actually desired for local filesystems, but there is little sense in keeping network filesystem mounted while possibly cutting of network connections.
I know that this is may not be the case for all network configuration daemon/tools, i.e. network configuration daemon may decide to leave network interfaces configured upon exit. However, this is definitely not the case for CentOS/RHEL. In the bugzilla related to this issue, it has been proposed to make network mounts PartOf remote-fs.target. IOW, these mount units will be stopped when we stop remote-fs.target (which should also happen upon entering rescue mode -- isolating rescue.target). Is this something that we want to address upstream? Does the above solution make sense? (FWIW, at least I don't see anything terribly wrong with it) I appreciate any suggestions or feedback. Thanks, Michal _______________________________________________ systemd-devel mailing list systemd-devel@lists.freedesktop.org https://lists.freedesktop.org/mailman/listinfo/systemd-devel