Final words on mounting points and fstab, I am quitting any update for wheezy 7.0.8 for the simple reason, that after the last update, four days ago, not even now a former pluggable usb-drive will only work or not due to the lack of a mounting point. I doubt that this is useful, to give each and every device around, a certain line in /etc/fstab. So I will probably move to external devices, that are recognized without editing every time the fstab as root.
Found this on stackexchange, well, probably shame on me, but it won't change my point of view.
as root, su.
Thumbs up.
May for others this link can be useful who may still want to use their OS, whatever this may be (mint, buntu, debian based) and who cannot get acquainted to systemd and its tricky behavior. So here is something that can put the fun in your sys, but getting rid of systemd.
Have fun.
I got Puppy linux and installed it on a usb stick.
In the BIOS i selected to boot from USB-FDD but it goes to my HD and ignores the USB stick,
What going on ?? (2 Replies)
Hello Everybody
I am planning to install Fedora core 8 on an extra PC I have; what I wanna do is to boot from a USB stick then install Fedora from an ISO image I already have via FTP. Could any one tell me how to create bootable USB Stick for Fedora as I already found how to install from FTP... (0 Replies)
I have a P-Series Machine running AIX 5.3, it has a USB Port on the front of the server, can I use a USB Stick on AIX platforms?? if so how..:rolleyes: (2 Replies)
Dummies questions, perfect for this. I cannot mount my idiotic usb stick on Slackware, I input the following on non-graphic mode as root:
Mount -t vfat /dev/sdc1/usbstick
usbstick is the folder i created for mounting my USB, the file system is FAT, and everytime I input that I get some kind... (2 Replies)
When mounting a USB stick or pen drive on a FreeBSD machine I always issue the following command:
mount -t msdosfs /dev/da0s1 /mnt
Something I have always wondered is what the option msdosfs stands for and more importantly, why it is necessary. (7 Replies)
Hello,
i am using a solaris thinclient that tries to connecting to a terminalserver. (RDP) Everything works fine, but the usb redirection. If i put in a usb stick i always get 2 usb-drives mounted. If i look in /tmp/SUNWut/mnt/<name of the host> i see 2 devices. One with the name of the... (2 Replies)
Hey Guys
I have an Ubuntu CD and I was thinking of creating like a bootable hard drive with various OS so that I can just boot OSs with t drive and not require the CDs. I was just wondering is there a way I can do this, like have Ubuntu boot from a USB stick? If yes how is that possible(even if I... (3 Replies)
hi
Howto mount an USB stick under SCO 5.0.7?
BTW ist it possible to mount USB stick in the command line using 'tools' at the Boot: prompt from OpenServer Release 5.0.7 installation CD? (1 Reply)
I am trying to use a USB (Pen?) drive on Unixware 7.1.4.
The USB stick is in the machine and the machine recognises it when I enter usbprobe as follows:
Path - Address Description
-----------------------------
+++++++ BUS #2
0 - 1 - HUB "UHCI Root Hub"
1 - 2 - HID "Chicony Wireless Device"... (1 Reply)
I would probably set all my rubber points here to get some real help for creating a boot device on a usb-stick. There is no CD-drive on this machine, thats why I need to use a usb-stick. And scrumming in a CD-drive to fuddle around in the fstab or something like that is out of reach.
My wisdom so... (9 Replies)
Discussion started by: 1in10
9 Replies
LEARN ABOUT CENTOS
systemd-remount-fs
SYSTEMD-REMOUNT-FS.SERVICE(8) systemd-remount-fs.service SYSTEMD-REMOUNT-FS.SERVICE(8)NAME
systemd-remount-fs.service, systemd-remount-fs - Remount root and kernel file systems
SYNOPSIS
systemd-remount-fs.service
/usr/lib/systemd/systemd-remount-fs
DESCRIPTION
systemd-remount-fs.service is an early-boot service that applies mount options listed in fstab(5) to the root file system, the /usr file
system and the kernel API file systems. This is required so that the mount options of these file systems -- which are pre-mounted by the
kernel, the initial RAM disk, container environments or system manager code -- are updated to those listed in /etc/fstab. This service
ignores normal file systems and only changes the root file system (i.e. /), /usr and the virtual kernel API file systems such as /proc,
/sys or /dev. This service executes no operation if /etc/fstab does not exist or lists no entries for the mentioned file systems.
For a longer discussion of kernel API file systems see API File Systems[1].
SEE ALSO systemd(1), fstab(5), mount(8)NOTES
1. API File Systems
http://www.freedesktop.org/wiki/Software/systemd/APIFileSystems
systemd 208SYSTEMD-REMOUNT-FS.SERVICE(8)