[Pkg-utopia-maintainers] Bug#783321: systemd opens file in /var/run and not in /run

Dmitry Katsubo dma_k at mail.ru
Fri May 8 14:39:42 UTC 2015


On 2015-04-27 17:13, Simon McVittie wrote:
> On 26/04/15 13:12, Dmitry Katsubo wrote:
>> Indeed other files could be opened from /var, but in single mode that
>> is very limited. The only service that lock it is NFS mount (rpcbind).
>> And I can always stop these services, thus allowing me to unmount
>> /var. But that is not the case with process with PID=1.
> 
> If you're booting into single-user mode to do sufficiently low-level
> filesystem surgery that you want /var not mounted, I would really
> recommend doing it from the initramfs or a live-CD/live-USB/etc.
> environment, not the running system. jessie's initramfs-tools puts fsck
> in the initramfs.
> 
> In particular, if you suspect that there might be disk corruption, using
> the maybe-corrupted system to repair itself seems much less than ideal:
> the "critical path" here has quite a lot of files in it (fsck, libc,
> ld.so, bash, e2fslibs...)

Thanks, Simon, for the suggestion. I haven't explored initramfs-tools so
far, but indeed live-CD/USB is much more flexible and reliable. In my
case I am confident about root partition (/) as it is mounted on SSD,
but /var could problematic.

> For the initramfs, only two files need to be intact (the kernel and the
> initramfs), and AIUI both of those are compressed data with a built-in
> checksum, so if it boots at all, you can be reasonably confident that
> it's good.
> 
> If you would like a more elaborate recovery environment, I usually go
> for a small secondary installation of Debian stable in its own partition
> at the end of the disk, but grml and Debian Live are also good choices.

P.S. Answering Michael Biebl question concerning dbus version which he
asked some time ago: I have v1.8.16-1


-- 
With best regards,
Dmitry



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