On Wed, Jan 22, 2014 at 01:34:18AM +0100, Andreas Cadhalpun wrote: > Hi Joey, > > On 20.01.2014 16:28, Joey Hess wrote: > >Josh Triplett wrote: > >>If the goal here is to hide the boot messages by default, note that > >>the default kernel command line includes "quiet", which hides most > >>kernel messages and systemd messages. > > > >Note that the hiding of systemd messages is unintentional, and can make > >debugging a system that fails to boot challanging. #718038 > > > >I asked the systemd maintainers to not make it overload quiet to do > >that, but they don't want to, so if systemd continues being used in > >Debian (even if not as default), d-i will need to start adding > >systemd.show_status=1 to the kernel command line. > > I just noticed, that when using plymouth and pressing <Esc> to see > the boot messeges, the systemd messages are shown (in spite of the > 'quiet' boot option), but without plymouth they are not shown. > This is weird...
systemd has some integration with plymouth; perhaps you've run into some aspect of that integration. - Josh Triplett -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to debian-boot-requ...@lists.debian.org with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact listmas...@lists.debian.org Archive: http://lists.debian.org/20140122015544.GA2659@leaf