On Mon, Aug 04, 2014 at 01:41:12PM -0500, Ben Shelton wrote:
> From: Richard Tollerton
>
> Halting if udev cannot start is problematic for a couple reasons.
> - Compared to a reboot loop, halting is much more difficult to recover
> from in remote deployments.
> - If the rootfs has a prepopulate
From: Richard Tollerton
Halting if udev cannot start is problematic for a couple reasons.
- Compared to a reboot loop, halting is much more difficult to recover
from in remote deployments.
- If the rootfs has a prepopulated /dev (which happens somewhat often),
the system may be able to boot u