the...@sys-concept.com wrote:
> On 12/19/2015 02:04 PM, John Runyon wrote:
>> Not proc, but you should add nofail to scanner.
>>
>> John Runyon
>> Sent from my phone
>>
>> On Dec 19, 2015 2:59 PM, the...@sys-concept.com wrote:
>>> On 12/19/2015 12:57 PM, Alexander Kapshuk wrote: 
>>> [snip] 
>>>
>>>>> It seems I'm not the only one: 
>>>>> https://forums.gentoo.org/viewtopic-t-1034770-highlight-localmount.html 
>>>>>
>>>>> "The problem was openrc-0.18.4. When I downgraded to openrc-0.16.4 the 
>>>>> problem went away." 
>>>>>
>>>>> Now, I can not downgrade without eth0 working. 
>>>>> Do I need to boot strap and downgrade or is there is easier solution? 
>>>>>
>>>>> -- 
>>>>> Thelma 
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>> Here is a news item that explains the situation. 
>>>>
>>>> 2015-10-07-openrc-0-18-localmount-and-netmount-changes 
>>>>    Title                     OpenRC-0.18 localmount and netmount changes 
>>>>    Author                    William Hubbs <willi...@gentoo.org> 
>>>>    Posted                    2015-10-07 
>>>>    Revision                  1 
>>>>
>>>> The behaviour of localmount and netmount is changing on Linux systems. 
>>>> In the past, these services always started successfully. However, now they 
>>>> will fail if a file system they attempt to mount cannot be mounted. 
>>>>
>>>> If you have file systems listed in fstab which should not be mounted at 
>>>> boot time, make sure to add noauto to the mount options. If you have 
>>>> file systems that you want to attempt to mount at boot time but failure 
>>>> should be allowed, add nofail to the mount options for these file 
>>>> systems in fstab. 
>>>>
>>> This is my fstab: 
>>> /dev/hda1 /boot ext2 noauto,noatime 1 1 
>>> /dev/hda3 / ext3 noatime 0 1 
>>> /dev/hda2 none swap sw 0 0 
>>> /dev/hda4 /home ext3 noatime   0 1 
>>>
>>> /dev/hdd /mnt/cdrom auto noauto,ro,users 0 0 
>>> /dev/hdd                /mnt/dvdr       auto         noauto,users           
>>>  0 0 
>>>
>>> # Scanner 
>>> none   /proc/bus/usb   usbfs           defaults,devmode=0666   0 0 
>>>
>>> none /proc proc defaults 0 0 
>>>
>>> Does it mean I should add: "nofail" to Scanner and "/proc" line? 
> OK, I've added "nofail" to Scanner, and still no network after boot.
>
> --
> Thelma
>
>


I'd try adding nofail to all except / and /home.  Then remove one at a
time until it fails again and that should be the one that is messing
with you. 

Dale

:-)  :-) 

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