Hi;
At boot up, the first thing that init.d seems to look for after udev is
an LVM fs set up. Finding none, because I am not using LVM, it
continues to boot echoing every service. What is the name of this LVM
checking service and how do I turn it off? Service xxx stop??
--
Regards Bill
Fedora
William Case wrote:
Hi;
At boot up, the first thing that init.d seems to look for after udev is
an LVM fs set up. Finding none, because I am not using LVM, it
continues to boot echoing every service. What is the name of this LVM
checking service and how do I turn it off? Service xxx
Mikkel L. Ellertson wrote:
William Case wrote:
Hi;
At boot up, the first thing that init.d seems to look for after udev is
an LVM fs set up. Finding none, because I am not using LVM, it
continues to boot echoing every service. What is the name of this LVM
checking service and how do I
Hi;
On Sun, 2008-10-12 at 17:39 -0500, Mikkel L. Ellertson wrote:
Mikkel L. Ellertson wrote:
William Case wrote:
Hi;
At boot up, the first thing that init.d seems to look for after udev is
an LVM fs set up. Finding none, because I am not using LVM, it
continues to boot echoing every
William Case wrote:
It's OK Mikkel, I gotcha anyways. I have checked rc.sysinit and it does
a
'if [ -x /sbin/lvm ]; then
action $Setting up Logical Volume Management: /sbin/lvm vgchange -a y
--ignorelockingfailure
fi
I have no use for lvm. I have thought of either commenting
Thanks Mikkel;
On Sun, 2008-10-12 at 18:36 -0500, Mikkel L. Ellertson wrote:
William Case wrote:
It's OK Mikkel, I gotcha anyways. I have checked rc.sysinit and it does
a
'if [ -x /sbin/lvm ]; then
action $Setting up Logical Volume Management: /sbin/lvm vgchange -a y