Josselin Mouette wrote: > Le jeudi 19 mars 2009 à 11:09 +0100, Marco d'Itri a écrit : > >> How exactly? The problem is that these groups are referenced in the udev >> configuration but do not exist, and this causes problmes at boot time >> with systems using LDAP. >> > > You mean, systems using only LDAP and not the local /etc/group? > > It looks to me that such setups are broken. Either they use /etc/group, > either they put these groups in their LDAP, but we can’t suddently start > supporting systems where important system groups are missing. >
In case its not clear, he means groups that are referenced from udev, but are not defined in /etc/group. So, on boot, the NSS resolver tries to find the group in /etc/group and this fails. The NSS resolver then tries to find the group in LDAP, but surprise, surprise, the LDAP server doesn't respond. Keep waiting, it has to respond soon... No answer. Lets try again... wait for it... When of course the reason that there is no response is because udev starts first, before networking or slapd is started. So you get all these silly errors displaying on screen for what is a normal condition. If the timeouts are too large, it also can delay the boot. Significantly. (supposedly libnss-ldapd - based on the description - is suppose to solve this also - not sure how - I haven't been able to get it working entirely satisfactorily). -- Brian May <br...@microcomaustralia.com.au> -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to debian-devel-requ...@lists.debian.org with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact listmas...@lists.debian.org