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The Lounge What is on Your Mind? What was your first Linux distribution? Post 302600594 by gencon on Tuesday 21st of February 2012 01:32:26 PM
Old 02-21-2012
Redhat, whatever version was around in the summer of 1997 when I left university, I missed Solaris big time. Smilie I had Redhat on a machine with a dual boot with Windows NT. NT would give me the blue screen of death on a semi-regular basis. A year or so later the machine got a hard disk reformat, a clean Redhat install and became a dedicated database server - during the next 2 years it was on the whole time, rebooted only on a dozen or so occasions, and never ever crashed despite its low power (it had no desktop installed) and our throwing rather a lot of database activity at it.

Last edited by gencon; 02-21-2012 at 05:28 PM..
 

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SYSTEMD-MACHINE-ID-COMMIT.SERVICE(8)			 systemd-machine-id-commit.service		      SYSTEMD-MACHINE-ID-COMMIT.SERVICE(8)

NAME
systemd-machine-id-commit.service - Commit a transient machine ID to disk SYNOPSIS
systemd-machine-id-commit.service DESCRIPTION
systemd-machine-id-commit.service is an early boot service responsible for committing transient /etc/machine-id files to a writable disk file system. See machine-id(5) for more information about machine IDs. This service is started after local-fs.target in case /etc/machine-id is a mount point of its own (usually from a memory file system such as "tmpfs") and /etc is writable. The service will invoke systemd-machine-id-setup --commit, which writes the current transient machine ID to disk and unmount the /etc/machine-id file in a race-free manner to ensure that file is always valid and accessible for other processes. See systemd-machine-id-setup(1) for details. The main use case of this service are systems where /etc/machine-id is read-only and initially not initialized. In this case, the system manager will generate a transient machine ID file on a memory file system, and mount it over /etc/machine-id, during the early boot phase. This service is then invoked in a later boot phase, as soon as /etc has been remounted writable and the ID may thus be committed to disk to make it permanent. SEE ALSO
systemd(1), systemd-machine-id-setup(1), machine-id(5), systemd-firstboot(1) systemd 237 SYSTEMD-MACHINE-ID-COMMIT.SERVICE(8)
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