Am Fr., 18. Juni 2021 um 16:35 Uhr schrieb Silvio Knizek <killermoehre@xxxxxxx>: > > Am Freitag, dem 18.06.2021 um 15:04 +0200 schrieb Norbert Lange: > > Hello, > > > > I have an extra mount for /usr/local (Tools + Services which are just > > useful for development), classically done vie /etc/fstab. > > > > Now there are a few systemd services within /usr/local/lib and systemd > > does not seem to load/reload those and start the ones that add a > > sysinit.wants. > > > > currently I have to do the following to get a "full start": > > systemctl daemon-reload > > systemctl start default.target > > > > What would be the correct way to cause systemd to reevaluate configuration? > > I get that this generally could lead to bad behaviour (endless > > reconfiguration if cycles), > > but for something hierarchical like mount-paths it should be possible. > > > > I could think of a unit having an after/requires to usr-local.mount or > > using a path unit watching PathChanged=/usr/local/lib/systemd. > > At any rate, I am not sure how I could tell systemd to start new units > > wanted by eg. > > sysinit.target if this was already fully started. `systemctl start > > default.target` seems > > a bit dangerous. > > > > Another, less important issue is that I cant set lazy unmount in fstab. > > > > Norbert. > Hi Norbert, > > make sure your /usr/local mount is done in the initrd and that you use > »systemctl link /path/to/unit.service« to enable them. That's not really helping, I don't want to chug in tons of tools in the initramfs this is no desktop system. systemctl link shouldnt be necessary, as /usr/local/lib/systemd/system is a standard unit path. Since there is a systemd-update-done that changes /etc I would have thought that systemd rereads the configuration (as /etc/systemd/system could have changed) during startup. I would want that for /usr/local/lib/systemd/system after this path was made available through a mount. If systemd assumes the whole /usr drive to be static and has no way to dynamically reload and "retarget" (adding new wants/requires dependencies to starting/started targets) then I guess that's the end of it. I dont know if thats the case or if I just dont know how (as systemd-update-done allows a changing /etc I would assume systemd would rescan it for units/dependencies) > > For the automount behaviour, you need to add > »noauto,x-systemd.autmount,x-systemd.idle-timeout=10s« > to the options part in the /etc/fstab. See man:systemd.mount for more > information. Thats Automount, but I want "LazyUnmount", and the suggestion kinda contradicts "make sure your /usr/local mount is done in the initrd" Norbert _______________________________________________ systemd-devel mailing list systemd-devel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx https://lists.freedesktop.org/mailman/listinfo/systemd-devel