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Re: Skipping fsck during boot with systemd?



On 12/08/2014 at 09:15 AM, Brian wrote:

> On Mon 08 Dec 2014 at 08:31:57 -0500, The Wanderer wrote:
> 
>> On 12/08/2014 at 06:41 AM, Martin Read wrote:

>>> There is *no legitimate basis* for arguing with the OP's
>>> complaint. The systemd transition has caused a user interface
>>> regression, which should be fixed.
>>> 
>>> I like systemd, but I do wish certain of its non-coding
>>> proponents would stop indulging in incendiary defence of it
>>> against legitimate complaints.
>> 
>> Exactly. It's at least as bad as the people who blame systemd for 
>> everything that they see go wrong after the changeover.
> 
> Sorry, I see no "defence" ("incendiary" or otherwise) of any init
> system being made in this thread. What I do see is people trying to
> help with a solution to a problem. One by Curt is referenced above.
> By all means criticise it but to see something like that as some some
> sort "proponent" argument is not warranted.

This thread is about complaints about not being able to interrupt /
abort / cancel an already-started boot-time fsck.

Several people in this thread (including, I think, you?) are responding
to those complaints by saying "It's your own fault, for not doing X",
rather than by saying "Yes, it's systemd's fault, for not doing /
letting you do Y".

I.e., they're turning a criticism of systemd around into an attack on
the criticizers.

That is, as indicated, a defense of systemd - and one of a sort which is
likely to fan the flames of dispute, rather than letting them cool.

-- 
   The Wanderer

The reasonable man adapts himself to the world; the unreasonable one
persists in trying to adapt the world to himself. Therefore all
progress depends on the unreasonable man.         -- George Bernard Shaw

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