I'm quite certain you know this stuff better than me, and I've heard before
that there is no /etc/init.d/networking
Unfortunately, there is proof that this is incorrect. If it's not intended to
be there, than that is another bug.
Steps to reproduce (tested with ubuntu-server and kubuntu karmic rc1):
- Install karmic rc1
- $ dpkg -S /etc/init.d/networking
netbase: /etc/init.d/networking
netbase is a dependancy of ubuntu-minimal and does contain
/etc/init.d/networking.
Another question is: is it important? All I know is that the network
comes up way too late (not why) and that booting halts as a result. A
slow boot is not really a problem, but this renders the machine unusable
and is thus a critical bug.
** Changed in: mountall (Ubuntu)
Status: Invalid => New
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karmic: networking is started too late in the boot process
https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/459134
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