The configuration is taken from /proc/cmdline, aiming at emulating the
behavior of the kernel when no initramfs is used.
The supported options are: root=, rootfstype=, rootwait=, rootflags=,
ro, and rw. rootdelay= was dropped, as it is not really useful in a
systemd world, but could easily be added.
v2: fix comments by Lennart, and complain loudly if root= can not be found
Cc: Harald Hoyer <harald@redhat.com>
Cc: Dave Reisner <dreisner@archlinux.org>
Traditional sysvinit systems would not complain about duplicates in
fstab. Rather it (through monut -a) would mount one fs on top of another,
in effect the last entry taking precedent.
In systemd, the first entry takes precedent, all subsequent ones are
ignored and an error is printed.
The change of behavior and the source of this error message was causing
some confusion, so give a hint what migt be wrong.
also a number of minor fixups and bug fixes: spelling, oom errors
that didn't print errors, not properly forwarding error codes,
few more consistency issues, et cetera
glibc/glib both use "out of memory" consistantly so maybe we should
consider that instead of this.
Eliminates one string out of a number of binaries. Also fixes extra newline
in udev/scsi_id
This is a valid source entry in /etc/fstab:
//192.168.6.10/data /data cifs noperm,auto
On Mon, Jun 4, 2012 at 2:04 PM, Dave Reisner <d@falconindy.com> wrote:
> On Mon, Jun 04, 2012 at 12:57:47PM +0200, Kay Sievers wrote:
>>
>> Changed it to use:
>> path_is_absolute()
>> instead of:
>> is_path(),
>> so that we still sanitize the input we might match against.
>>
>> Let me know, if you think that could still cause any problems?
> Yes, this will still break CIFS shares.
This can invalidate otherwise valid source paths with trailing slashes,
such as "host:/" in the case of a network mount.
Based on a patch from Dave Reisner <dreisner@archlinux.org>, which
removed the slash mangling entirely.
Changed it to match on the leading slash to exclude non-path values.
Previously generated units were always placed at the end of the search
path. With this change there will be three unit dirs instead of one, to
place generated entries at the beginning, in the middle and at the end
of the search path:
beginning: for units that need to override all configuration, regardless
of user or vendor. Example use: system-update-generator uses this to
temporarily redirect default.target.
middle: for units that need to override vendor configuration, but not
vendor configuration. Example use: /etc/fstab should override vendor
supplied configuration (think /tmp), but should not override native user
configuration.
end: does not override anything but is available as well. Possible usage
might be to convert D-Bus bus service files to native units but allowing
vendor supplied native units to win.
UnitPath= is also writable via native units and may be used by generators
to clarify from which file a unit is generated. This patch also hooks up
the cryptsetup and fstab generators to set UnitPath= accordingly.