Vivid and Wily fixes uploaded.

** Changed in: setserial (Ubuntu Wily)
       Status: In Progress => Fix Committed

** Changed in: setserial (Ubuntu Vivid)
       Status: Triaged => In Progress

** Description changed:

  NFSd does not start due to systemd ordering cycle.
  
  Manually starting with "systemctl start nfs-kernel-server" after boot
  works fine.
  
  here systemd lines from dmesg:
  
  [   43.569341] systemd[1]: Cannot add dependency job for unit 
gssproxy.service, ignoring: Unit gssproxy.service failed to load: No such file 
or directory.
  [   43.595080] systemd[1]: Found ordering cycle on nfs-server.service/start
  [   43.620748] systemd[1]: Found dependency on network.target/start
  [   43.646476] systemd[1]: Found dependency on NetworkManager.service/start
  [   43.672292] systemd[1]: Found dependency on basic.target/start
  [   43.697952] systemd[1]: Found dependency on sockets.target/start
  [   43.723381] systemd[1]: Found dependency on cups.socket/start
  [   43.748530] systemd[1]: Found dependency on sysinit.target/start
  [   43.773533] systemd[1]: Found dependency on setserial.service/start
  [   43.798185] systemd[1]: Found dependency on remote-fs.target/start
  [   43.822739] systemd[1]: Found dependency on remote-fs-pre.target/start
  [   43.871768] systemd[1]: Found dependency on nfs-server.service/start
  [   43.896442] systemd[1]: Breaking ordering cycle by deleting job 
network.target/start
  [   43.921641] systemd[1]: Job network.target/start deleted to break ordering 
cycle starting with nfs-server.service/start
  
  SRU test case
  =============
-  - Install network-manager, nfs-kernel-server, and setserial into a clean 
vivid VM.
-  - Reboot, and you'll find the above ordering cycle (check "sudo journalctl 
-p warning"). "systemctl status nfs-server.service" will be not running (it 
could also be that the cycle gets broken on a different point, but that's the 
most likely one).
-  - With the fixed setserial package (upgrade, then reboot) there should be no 
cycle and all services start up normally.
+  - Install network-manager, nfs-kernel-server, and setserial into a clean 
vivid VM.
+  - Reboot, and you'll find the above ordering cycle (check "sudo journalctl 
-p warning"). "systemctl status nfs-server.service" will be not running (it 
could also be that the cycle gets broken on a different point, but that's the 
most likely one).
+  - With the fixed setserial package (upgrade, then reboot) there should be no 
cycle and all services start up normally.
+  - Double-check "systemctl status setserial" that the unit started and output 
from the init.d script looks reasonable.
+ 
+ Regression potential: The new .service has less strict startup
+ dependencies/ordering than the autogenerated LSB one, so I don't see a
+ potential problem with introducing new cycles. The new unit could
+ potentially fail to start if there's a bug in unit installation (this is
+ covered by the test case). So all in all, very low.
  
  ProblemType: Bug
  DistroRelease: Ubuntu 15.04
  Package: nfs-kernel-server 1:1.2.8-9ubuntu8.1
  Uname: Linux 4.1.0-040100rc1-generic x86_64
  ApportVersion: 2.17.2-0ubuntu1
  Architecture: amd64
  CurrentDesktop: Unity
  Date: Thu May  7 12:26:09 2015
  InstallationDate: Installed on 2012-12-22 (865 days ago)
  InstallationMedia: Ubuntu 12.10 "Quantal Quetzal" - Release amd64 (20121017.5)
  SourcePackage: nfs-utils
  UpgradeStatus: Upgraded to vivid on 2015-04-23 (13 days ago)

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https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/1452644

Title:
  NFSd does not start due to systemd ordering cycle with setserial

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