On Tue, Jan 19, 2021 at 04:03:14PM +0100, steve wrote: > Le 19-01-2021, à 15:53:00 +0100, to...@tuxteam.de a écrit : > > >>find /usr -follow -printf "" > >>find: Boucle détectée dans le système de fichiers ; « ‘/usr/bin/X11’ » est > >>dans la même boucle que ‘/usr/bin’. > >> > >>ls -l /usr/bin/X11 > >>lrwxrwxrwx 1 root root 1 6 mai 2013 /usr/bin/X11 -> . > >> > >> > >>find /sys -follow -printf "" > >[...] > > > >Not every one of those are "bad". The X11 one is normal. Many of those in > >/sys and /dev, too. > > How can I tell the difference ? > > > > >It'd be interesting to know which one your startup is choking on. > > What does it mean more precisely? The lines come from syslog and only > mention partitions: > > Jan 19 09:09:33 box systemd-udevd[607]: sdg6: Failed to update device > symlinks: Too many levels of symbolic links > Jan 19 09:09:33 box systemd-udevd[611]: sdc1: Failed to update device > symlinks: Too many levels of symbolic links > Jan 19 09:09:33 box systemd-udevd[572]: sdc6: Failed to update device > symlinks: Too many levels of symbolic links
Hm. Difficult to say. Besides, I'm a systemd analphabet. Are those /dev/sdXX above symlinks? As far as I know, there is a knob to increase udev's log level in /etc/udev/udev.conf -- it's called udev_log (see e.g. [1]). Perhaps it's helpful. Cheers [1] https://www.man7.org/linux/man-pages/man5/udev.conf.5.html - t
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