On Thu, 2018-01-25 at 15:40 +0100, Franck Bui wrote: > Sorry I was probably not clear: by "do the equivalent of "mount -a" > during boot only" I meant to mount fs listed in fstab (without > "noauto") the way it's done currently by systemd during boot. > > During boot there shouldn't be any changes. The behavior change happens > later if neither "auto" nor "noauto" is specified: by default do not try > to automagically mount filesystems.
This would require distinguishing "boot" and "non-boot" modes of operation, so that systemd could switch mount handling behavior at some point. How would you define where "boot" ends? You could try a definition like "boot is over if there is no unit that is scheduled for start and has been since the initial transaction", but then if you have some obscure service that takes 5 hours to start, this could still lead to very surprising sudden behavior changes on a system that has otherwise been running for hours... And if you define boot based on when some software has completed starting, and have any mounts which are not necessary for boot to succeed, then there's an obvious race condition - sometimes the devices would become visible and be mounted during boot, sometimes the boot would complete first and the devices would not be mounted automatically. I doubt that would be what you'd want. I think this issue makes your "only during boot" goal a bad idea in general for such non-essential mounts. For mounts that are required as part of the initial transaction, some kind of "only mount this automatically if it has not been mounted before" logic (rather than based on "is it boot" directly) is the closest I can think of to a sane feature. But still not something that I'd consider a particularly good idea. _______________________________________________ systemd-devel mailing list systemd-devel@lists.freedesktop.org https://lists.freedesktop.org/mailman/listinfo/systemd-devel