Hi, (as this thread has already attracted two "interesting replies", I'll try again to convey the message which has not been heard yet... I don't have high hopes this thread won't become a flamefest, but I want to at least try to kill the flames before they explode...)
(And if you know systemd, please scroll down and help Julian with his actual question...) On Dienstag, 22. Juli 2014, Julian Gilbey wrote: > I just tried updating testing on my system. I currently use > sysvinit-core (reasons below), but aptitude is telling me that I > should remove this in favour of systemd-sysv. Hmm, why is that? Because all modern desktops now need systemd so all features work. blame upstream^w^wsend patches to upstream and Debian will have those... Really, get over it or do something. Ranting on -devel will not change anything. And this is actually pretty old news too: see http://layer-acht.org/thinking/blog/2014-06-03-systemd-mostly-harmless/ Thank you. > So I would presume that for many or most Debian systems, systemd is > now required s#most Debian systems#most Debian desktop systems# > For me, this is a killer, as I still do not know how to solve the > problem I asked a while back on debian-user > (https://lists.debian.org/debian-user/2014/04/msg01286.html): in > summary, I need to unlock an encrypted filesystem during boot time by > asking for a password to feed into encfs. But I cannot figure out how > to do this under systemd. > > Answers to this question would also be much appreciated! I hope someone will be able to help Julian with this question... cheers, Holger
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