On 02/27/2013 09:08 PM, Michael Biebl wrote:
That is not quite true.
well, in our case it is...
If systemd is active, the services are enabled right away. If systemd is not active, we will create a flag file and the symlinks will be created the next time the system is booted with systemd.
..since we're installing into a chroot where systemd is not 'active', but yes, thanks for the general definition.
What exactly does live-config-systemd do, btw?
it contains the service file to start live-config which is a bunch of scripts to alter certain aspects of the system during boot, see man live-config.
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