Hi Ben,

Here are some tests:

A wheezy system:
    For a new test I took a standard _wheezy_ system without systemd,
    3.2.0-4 kernel (Debian 3.2.60-1+deb7u3). No nfs problem.

    I upgraded libc6 to jessie's 2.19.9: no nfs problem.

    Then I installed the linux-image-3.14.2-amd64 (3.14.15-2) kernel
    (which pulled in initramfs-tools) and rebooted: : YES there is
    the nfs problem!

A jessie system:
    Another system, one of the jessie systems with older kernels installed:
    - kernel 3.13.10  nfs problem YES
    - kernel 3.14.12  nfs problem YES
    - kernel 3.14.15  nfs problem YES
    - kernel 3.2.0-4 (3.2.54 from wheezy) nfs problem NO
    This system uses systemd.

Looks like it's a kernel problem, the problem is not introduced in 3.14.11
or 12, as I thought earlier.

Piet

On Sun, 2014-08-24 08:04, Ben Hutchings wrote:
> Control: tag -1 moreinfo
>
> On Fri, 2014-08-22 at 12:06 +0200, Piet Plomp wrote:
> [...]
>>    * What exactly did you do (or not do) that was effective (or
>>      ineffective)?
>>      aptitude update, which pulled in kernel 3.14.12, systemd for the
>> first
>>      time, and libc6 2.19.9? Problem has also been reproduced on older
>> libc6's

This libc version cannot be correct. But it is one of the 2.19 series, and
the problem still exists in 2.19.9.

> [...]
>
> So can you test with the newer kernel and sysvinit instead of systemd?
> Or alternately, the older kernel and systemd?
>
> Ben.
>
> --
> Ben Hutchings
> One of the nice things about standards is that there are so many of them.
>


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