On Thursday 30 October 2014 10:27:50 Hans wrote: > Dear maintainers, > > completely without starting any flamewars: > > I am using systemd and I have /usr mounted on a separate partition as well > as /var, /home, /boot and /. > > Additionally /usr, /var and /home are luks encrypted. > > Due to this profile, I get a lot of annoying errors, as systemd does not > find /usr when it is started, because it produces an error and then > switches to verbose mode. This is very annoying! > > For a new installation it might be ok, to put /usr on the root partition, > but I guess, there are a lot of systems in the world running a partition > profile like mine. > > Besides of the mentioned problem systemd is running well. > > I thought about this problem. Might it be possible, to change systemd in > that way, that it will start after all partitions are mounted? I know, it > must be done in the source code, but as I am no coder, I cannot do it > myself. > > So I ask the developers hereby, maybe it wil be possible to do that. > > Again, I do not want to start any flamewars! IMO each user should decide for > himself, what he wants to use. I want to use systemd, and I just intend > with this message to improve systemd. > > Thank you very much for reading this and any help. > > Best regards > > Hans
I think this problem should be resolved. I know the newer desirable keeping of /usr on /. However, I would bet 99% of existing multi-partition Debian installations have usr on a separate partition. Historically and even recent installations (not that I like the partitioning done by the installer, but ...) I may move mine soon once I resolve some disk hardware issues but I should not have to do this just to get rid of a superfluous "fail" message and switch to verbose mode. Aside from this issue, I am running systemd just fine! -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to debian-user-requ...@lists.debian.org with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact listmas...@lists.debian.org Archive: https://lists.debian.org/35371725.9D9z6tCyhZ@dovidhalevi