Niels Thykier <ni...@thykier.net> writes:

> NeilBrown:
>> On Sun, Mar 05 2017, Daniel Pocock wrote:
>> 
>> The systemd unit files are designed so that svcgssd will only be
>> started if gssproxy didn't start - and gssproxy is tried first.
>> 
>> If you use something other than systemd, similar logic would be
>> needed.
>
> @Robbie: Can you clarify what happens for people who have chosen to
> use sysvinit as init system?  Will they end up with gssproxy or
> svcgssd or a broken NFS?

I don't totally understand these unit files, so this is probably a
better question for the NFS folk.  But:

The gssproxy package contains a sysvinit script, which works just fine
on my sysvinit system.  (And I assume on systemd systems due to lack of
bug reports :) )

Since nfs-common doesn't provide sysvinit scripts as far as I can tell,
I think you already can't run any of this on them, unless I'm missing
something.

So you'd get gssproxy, and no NFS, but that was already the case.

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