On Sun, Dec 2, 2012 at 10:26 AM, Rob van der Putten <r...@sput.nl> wrote: > Tom H wrote:
>> You can use an insserv override to add >> Should-Start: $named >> Should-Stop: $named >> to the nfs-kernel-server LSB headers to ensure that bind starts before >> nfs. > > The bind9 script says: Provides: bind9 > > I assume this is somehow translated into: Provides: named. > > Where can I find more on this subject. > > How do I check that adding 'Should-Start: $named' and 'Should-Stop: $named' > won't introduce a circular dependency? Why a circular dependency? You're adding it to nfs-kernel-server not to bind9. "Provides: bind9" means that the bind9 init script provides the bind9 boot facility. "bind9" is one of the facilities that fulfills the "$named" facility (see "/etc/insserv.conf"). "Required-Start: boot_facility_x" means that boot_facility_x must be available for the script to be started. "Should-Start: boot_facility_y" means that, if boot_facility_y is present, it must be available for the script to be started. > This still leaves me with my X + mouse problem. > Is there a (standard) way to run a script when starting X? I've forgotten what your X/mouse problem was, but, since I didn't answer it, I didn't have anything to suggest (unsurprisingly since I know pretty much nothing about X). Sorry. -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to debian-user-requ...@lists.debian.org with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact listmas...@lists.debian.org Archive: http://lists.debian.org/CAOdo=sx0a3wmbdv4zcutvup61xcfdp9dthfkp-6fok1ctov...@mail.gmail.com