> De: "Ricardo J. Barberis" <ricardo@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> > [Unit] > After=network.target remote-fs.target nss-lookup.target network-online.target > </code> > > > The After line is the important one, I copied it from > /usr/lib/systemd/system/nginx.service and added "network-online.target" > at the end. > > After making your changes, be sure to reenable the service so it takes your > new unit, e.g.: > > # systemctl reenable nginx.service > > > It worked for me, maybe it works for you? On my systems, I saw that network.target was not started, because no service required it ("After=foo" is totally useless if there isn't any "Require=foo" too... Mwokay, why not...). I just added a symlink to force network.target to start, and the ordering problem is solved : /etc/systemd/system/multi-user.target.wants/network.target -> /usr/lib/systemd/system/network.target That link avoids modifying the configuration of _all_ the services needing a fully working network (ssh, web, mail, snmp, and so on) with a crappy, but easy-to-deploy, one-liner like this (no, I'm not ashamed) : # for fic in $(grep -rl "After=.*network.target" /lib/systemd/system | cut -d/ -f5 | grep -v "network-online.target") ; do [ ! -d "/etc/systemd/system/${fic}.d" ] && mkdir "/etc/systemd/system/${fic}.d" ; echo -e "[Unit]\nAfter=network-online.target" > "/etc/systemd/system/${fic}.d/local-network-online.conf" ; done && systemctl daemon-reload By the way, congratulations to the genius who decided to name one of the files "-.slice"... Yes, a filename beginning by a hyphen. I suppose anybody here understands why it's probably one of the worst ideas he never had. Sylvain. Pensez ENVIRONNEMENT : n'imprimer que si ncessaire _______________________________________________ CentOS mailing list CentOS@xxxxxxxxxx https://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos