Michael Biebl (bi...@debian.org) wrote:
> The output of
> systemctl --user status
> busctl --user
> systemctl --user list-unit-files
> systemctl --user show-environment
>
> might be helpful as well.
Sure:
vk@sherri ~ % systemctl --user status
Michael Biebl (bi...@debian.org) wrote:
> Could you disable the user services you use one by one and test if that
> makes a service.
> I would probably start by disabling the syncthing.service user service.
You need to help me out on that one I guess:
vk@sherri ~ % systemctl --user disable synct
Michael Biebl (bi...@debian.org) wrote:
> Am 08.10.2017 um 11:59 schrieb Karl Voit:
> > Oct 08 10:10:16 sherri syncthing[1594]: [GDIGF] INFO: Established secure
> > connection to [...]
> > Oct 08 10:10:16 sherri syncthing[1594]: [GDIGF] INFO: Device [...] client
> > is "syncthing v0.14.38" named
Am 08.10.2017 um 11:59 schrieb Karl Voit:
> Oct 08 10:10:16 sherri syncthing[1594]: [GDIGF] INFO: Established secure
> connection to [...]
> Oct 08 10:10:16 sherri syncthing[1594]: [GDIGF] INFO: Device [...] client is
> "syncthing v0.14.38" named "Blackbox"
> Oct 08 10:10:45 sherri systemd[1]: us
The output of
systemctl --user status
busctl --user
systemctl --user list-unit-files
systemctl --user show-environment
might be helpful as well.
Since you mentioned that it worked in the past, can you investigate if
you installed any new packages/upgrades or changed your configuration
since the la
Am 08.10.2017 um 11:59 schrieb Karl Voit:
> [boot process]
> [things seem to be normal, even syncthing is starting up and then]
> Oct 08 10:10:16 sherri syncthing[1594]: [GDIGF] INFO: Established secure
> connection to [...]
> Oct 08 10:10:16 sherri syncthing[1594]: [GDIGF] INFO: Device [...] cli