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I, never seen this before. 3rd entry down. 'dev-sda3.device'. Is this normal now?
┌─[jimi]-
└─[~]--► systemd-analyze blame
6.024s netctl@wlp8s0b1\x2dNETGEAR21\x2d5Gb.service
5.830s systemd-journald.service
5.339s dev-sda3.device
1.767s systemd-logind.service
1.755s alsa-restore.service
1.747s brcms_suppression.service
1.747s systemd-user-sessions.service
1.527s systemd-sysctl.service
1.063s sys-kernel-config.mount
1.019s tmp.mount
991ms sys-kernel-debug.mount
966ms dev-hugepages.mount
965ms dev-mqueue.mount
853ms systemd-vconsole-setup.service
793ms systemd-tmpfiles-setup-dev.service
669ms polkit.service
648ms systemd-udev-trigger.service
566ms systemd-udevd.service
494ms systemd-tmpfiles-clean.service
389ms systemd-random-seed.service
339ms systemd-journal-flush.service
274ms systemd-backlight@backlight:acpi_video0.service
256ms systemd-remount-fs.service
232ms systemd-rfkill@rfkill0.service
145ms user@1000.service
113ms kmod-static-nodes.service
102ms systemd-tmpfiles-setup.service
102ms udisks2.service
80ms dev-disk-by\x2duuid-e6501f57\x2dfd22\x2d4146\x2d959c\x2d439e620270cb.swap
53ms systemd-update-utmp.service
50ms rtkit-daemon.service
3ms sys-fs-fuse-connections.mount
Crude matter we are not, Luminous beings we are
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Yes, I think so -- systemd will now attempt to mount partitions automatically depending on their GUID partition code.
Does /dev/sda3 contain your root partition?
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Does /dev/sda3 contain your root partition?
Yes everything resides there, other than swap. This must have happened with the 'systemd-219' update?
Crude matter we are not, Luminous beings we are
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This must have happened with the 'systemd-219' update?
TBH I'm not sure -- perhaps @falconindy can shed more light on this; I've only just noticed it...
http://www.freedesktop.org/software/sys … rator.html
EDIT: Sorry for the off-topic but if @Buddlespit is reading this, you were right about the separate disks:
This generator will only look for root partitions on the same physical disk the EFI System Partition (ESP) is located on. It will only look for the other partitions on the same physical disk the root file system is located on. These partitions will not be searched on systems where the root file system is distributed on multiple disks, for example via btrfs RAID.
Last edited by Head_on_a_Stick (2015-06-14 13:47:17)
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thnx... I've given up on trying to get systemd to mount my /home... I can't get rid of my fstab because of cifs mounts anyway. Good learning experience on writing .mount units though.
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