Le 28/01/2025 à 23:28, David Wright a écrit : [...]
But would that not be /etc/systemd/system/…/systemd-timesyncd.service? The dangling symlink is for ….timesync1.service, whatever that is. Analogously, my systemd-networkd service has two symlinks: /e/s/s/dbus-org.freedesktop.network1.service /e/s/s/multi-user.target.wants/systemd-networkd.service both pointing to /lib/systemd/system/systemd-networkd.service . I don't know what the first of those does.
[...] the postinst section of the systemd-timesyncd package contains this: [...] # was-enabled defaults to true, so new installations run enable. if deb-systemd-helper --quiet was-enabled 'systemd-timesyncd.service'; then # Enables the unit on first installation, creates new # symlinks on upgrades if the unit file has changed. deb-systemd-helper enable 'systemd-timesyncd.service' >/dev/null || true else # Update the statefile to add new symlinks (if any), which need to be # cleaned up on purge. Also remove old symlinks.deb-systemd-helper update-state 'systemd-timesyncd.service' >/dev/null || true
fi [...]I don't know how this operates but perhaps (mere supposition) timesync1 replaces timesyncd when there is a package update...