No, systemd's postinst is supposed to create it on first installation if
you have TMPTIME set to infinity in rcS. That wouldn't work if you
installed Ubuntu 14.10 first and *then* change TMPTIME, as that's an
one-time migration.

Looking at that more closely, it's probably for the better that we don't
run exactly this code all the time, as /usr/lib/tmpfiles.d/tmp.conf has
changed since that migration code was made (creating the file would also
disable /tmp/systemd-private*). We should rename it and only override
/tmp/.

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https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/1444958

Title:
  STC830:Brazos:br311p06:  file(s) are deleted from the /tmp after each
  reboot on Ubuntu OS

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