Am 23.03.13 12:59, schrieb Kay Sievers: > On Sat, Mar 23, 2013 at 5:49 AM, Harald Hoyer <[email protected]> wrote: >> Am 23.03.2013 03:05, schrieb Lennart Poettering: >>> On Thu, 14.03.13 13:15, [email protected] ([email protected]) wrote: >>> >>>> From: Harald Hoyer <[email protected]> >>>> >>>> Mount units with "x-rootfs.mount" are now ordered before root-fs.target. >>>> As we sometimes construct /sysroot mounts in /etc/fstab in the initrd, >>>> we want these to be mounted before the root-fs.target is active. >>> >>> Hmm, I don't get this, what is this for? Where's the destinction to >>> "x-initrd.mount"? Why do we need both? Examples? >>> >>> Apparently a patch like this got merged, but it uses >>> "x-initrd-rootfs.mount" as identifier, is that the same thing? If so, >>> the thing really should be called "x-initrd.foobar", i.e. "x-initrd" is >>> supposed to be the 'namespace' the setting is in. >>> >>> Anyway, totally not grokking this, please enlighten me. >>> >> >> Sometimes we need to create an /etc/fstab entry for /sysroot in the initramfs >> manually. So, we could either hardcode "/sysroot" to result in dependencies >> to >> SPECIAL_ROOT_FS_TARGET, or mark it with "x-initrd-rootfs.mount". > > What Lennart meant was: all the initrd things should stick to one and > the same prefix x-initrd.* and not invent new top-level prefixes with > x-initrd-*.
well, so, x-initrd.rootfs-mount ?? > > This can only be one entry ever, and it will always be /sysroot, > right? This flexibility is probably not needed then and we can > hardcode /sysroot? I just wanted to be flexible, because initrd-root-fs.target and initrd-fs.target are different targets. initrd-root-fs.target is defined by fstab in the initrd. initrd-fs.target is defined by fstab in the real root. One use case could be, that you want to mount /sysroot/etc before you parse /sysroot/etc/fstab for xinitrd.mount. _______________________________________________ systemd-devel mailing list [email protected] http://lists.freedesktop.org/mailman/listinfo/systemd-devel
