On 12/09/16 19:57, Greg Wooledge wrote:
On Mon, Sep 12, 2016 at 07:32:52PM +0100, Clive Menzies wrote:
Most of the common server-oriented packages in jessie have systemd
units written for them. E.g. openssh-server:
~$ dpkg -L openssh-server | grep systemd
/lib/systemd
/lib/systemd/system
/lib/systemd/system/ssh.service
/lib/systemd/system/ssh.socket
/lib/systemd/system/ssh@.service
However, there are still several packages that were not updated to use
systemd facilities in time for jessie. These packages still ship with
sysvinit scripts.
When a given service has sysvinit script and does *not* have systemd
unit files, it falls back to the sysvinit scripts.
Thanks Greg
That makes sense. Does this mean init will disappear from Debian in a
future release?
It is interesting that you gave ssh as an example because we seem to
have encountered strange problems with mixed IDE/SATA systems:
specifically ssh, samba and dovecot.
The first server(U) we reinstalled (twice) seemed to exhibit samba and
dovecot communications problems with some clients (but it was
complicated by problems we later discovered on those) after the first
reinstall. The second time, we changed the system disk from IDE to SATA
(making it exclusively SATA) and it cleared most of the client
communication issues.
We reinstalled serverM on SATA, similarly the communications problems
disappeared.
The working back up server is all SATA but the "broken" one isn't; it's
IDE for the system, and software RAIDed SATA for the data. We've
ordered another PCI SATA card to change it.
Has anyone else seen this?
Regards
Clive
--
Clive Menzies
http://freecriticalthinking.org