Hi Mantas, thx for your answer.
[...] >> 1. How can I prevent systemd from mounting a manually unmounted >> partition? The partiton should be mounted automatically during system >> start, though. >> >First, see if you can figure out *why* systemd mounted it. I tried to found that out, but couldn't find any reason. >systemd shouldn't generally start any unit on a whim ? if the corresponding >.mount was started, then it likely was either by request, or as a >dependency of some program, or via autofs (if you use systemd.automount). I don't use systemd.automount. No one requested it as far as I can see. And "systemctl list-dependencies var-backup.mount" only shows var-backup.mount. >> 2. If I would switch from mount/umount to pure systemd behaviour for >> mounting and unmounting partitons in my script, would a command like >> "systemctl stop|start /var/backup" be sufficient? >> >Looks about right, though in some cases `systemctl foo var-backup.mount` >might be needed. Ok, thx. >But, I don't think it will make any difference. >> And how would a remount command (for read only or read write) look >> like? >> >There isn't any. Use `mount`. Ok. Bye. Michael. -- Michael Hirmke _______________________________________________ systemd-devel mailing list systemd-devel@lists.freedesktop.org https://lists.freedesktop.org/mailman/listinfo/systemd-devel