Michael sudo mount -o remount,rw nfs remote share not in 'host.dir' format It appears /dev/nfs is an exception to everything. But it works. I suspect the kernel is somewhat difficult about having its root file system remounted under itself. I have not looked at the kernel code. Duncan Hare
714 931 7952 From: Michael Biebl <bi...@debian.org> To: Duncan Hare <d...@synoia.com>; 881834 <881...@bugs.debian.org> Sent: Wednesday, November 15, 2017 10:55 AM Subject: Re: Bug#881834: systemd: lib/systemd/systemd-remount-fs fails with /dev/nfs in fstab Please always CC the bug report on replies. Am 15.11.2017 um 19:26 schrieb Duncan Hare: > Michael > > Thank you for your quick response. > > Should be: > > The failure results the the root file system being mounted read-only, > and the system is unusable, because the file system is mounted read only. > > Yes, I can log in. > > verbose debug log from the boot process: see attached file "journalctl.log " > > Please also include the output of the following commands: > systemctl status systemd-remount-fs : attached file "remount-fs.log" > sytemd-analyze dump: attached file "systemd.dump" The journal log indicates that you did not actually use systemd.log_level=debug to generate a debug log. Please add that to the kernel command line to get a more verbose log. That said, why do you have / in /etc/fstab in the first place? What happens if you remove that fstab entry? -- Why is it that all of the instruments seeking intelligent life in the universe are pointed away from Earth?