Hello, this is the full unit:
# /etc/systemd/system/vdr.service [Unit] Description=Video Disk Recorder Wants=systemd-udev-settle.service After=systemd-udev-settle.service [Service] Type=notify ExecStartPre=/bin/sh /usr/lib/vdr/merge-commands.sh "commands" ExecStartPre=/bin/sh /usr/lib/vdr/merge-commands.sh "reccmds" ExecStart=/usr/bin/vdr Restart=on-failure RestartPreventExitStatus=0 2 [Install] WantedBy=multi-user.target # /etc/systemd/system/vdr.service.d/override.conf [Unit] After=remote-fs.target Requires=remote-fs.target I only added the x-systemd options to /etc/fstab because the filesystems where not mounted at boot time at all with the old fstab options that I used before the upgrade to Debian (I did use yavdr before - a distro that was based on a super old 12.x version of Ubuntu). There I just used 192.168.1.2:/video /video nfs defaults,rsize=8192,wsize=8192,soft,nolock,noatime 0 0 If I try with this entry, the auto-generated video.mount unit fails as it seems to be started too early: ● video.mount - /video Loaded: loaded (/etc/fstab; generated) Active: failed (Result: exit-code) since Fri 2021-07-02 19:26:02 CEST; 2min 46s ago Where: /video What: 192.168.1.2:/video Docs: man:fstab(5) man:systemd-fstab-generator(8) Jul 02 19:26:02 vdr systemd[1]: Mounting /video... Jul 02 19:26:02 vdr mount[403]: mount.nfs: Network is unreachable Jul 02 19:26:02 vdr systemd[1]: video.mount: Mount process exited, code=exited, status=32/n/a Jul 02 19:26:02 vdr systemd[1]: video.mount: Failed with result 'exit-code'. Jul 02 19:26:02 vdr systemd[1]: Failed to mount /video. Best regards, Reiner Am Fr., 2. Juli 2021 um 19:15 Uhr schrieb Reco <recovery...@enotuniq.net>: > Hi. > > On Fri, Jul 02, 2021 at 06:12:58PM +0200, Reiner Buehl wrote: > > I have a directory that is mounted via NFS from a remote server. > > Actually, you have an autofs mountpoint, because you set > x-systemd.automount option in fstab. > Only if something starts using that mountpoint an NFS filesystem should > be mounted there. > > In another words - you do not require your NFS filesystem to be mounted > at boot time, and thus remote-fs.target does not include your NFS > filesystem. > > > > If I boot the vdr daemon fails during startup with the error message > > In other words, vdr fails to trigger automounting of the filesystem in > question. As usual with journald, the actual reason of this is not > present in this log. > > > > The vdr.service has an override of > > > > [Unit] > > After=remote-fs.target > > Requires=remote-fs.target > > > > to ensure that the filesystem is mounted. > > These dependencies are useless for your service given the current state > of your fstab. > The reason being - "autofs" filesystems belong to local-fs.target, not > remote-fs.target, and explicitly depending on local-fs.target is useless > anyway (it's one of the default dependencies for the most units). > What you probably need here is a dependency for a .mount unit > corresponding to your NFS filesystem. > > > > If I try to restart vdr.service, it fails again with the same error but > if > > I just cd to the directory and then try to restart it, it starts and > works > > fine. > > Can you show the result of "systemctl cat vdr" please? > > > What is systemd doing here that blocks the mount point for the vdr > process? > > Many things are possible here. You have ProtectSystem=full set in unit, > or you have PrivateMounts=true set in there. > > > Do I need different fstab options? > > It depends. x-systemd.automount is useful, because it does not require > your NFS server to be present at boot time. > I'll refrain from suggesting certain hacks for now, I'd like to see your > unit in full first. > > Reco > >