On Sat, Sep 13, 2014 at 02:01:06PM -0700, Ben Longbons wrote: > > I don't use schroot very often, and I recently noticed that when I use > it, the inner system is missing all its mounts. In particular, there is > nothing mounted on /proc or /dev/pts, but there is a private /tmp/ that > is persistent even after schroot exits. > > Upgrading to the version in experimental does NOT help. > > I do use systemd, and I don't think I've successfully used schroot since > I switched.
What do you mean by "inner system" here? I would suggest running with the "-v" options to make schroot display all the mount/umount operations as well as all the other setup and cleanup work. Do you see anything missing or failing? All the setup/cleanup is done via the setup scripts in /etc/schroot/setup.d, so it should be possible to add additional diagnostics to the scripts to see what's going wrong. You can also run with "--debug=notice", which will give even more details about the schroot internals, but I'm not sure in this case it will reveal much of interest; I'd recommend "-v" though. I have not tried schroot on systemd though I think other people have had success since a few patches were submitted and applied for e.g. mount namespaces. In general these are to make schroot work around things systemd has broken and/or arbitrarily changed which break us. It's entirely possible the systemd people broke even more basic system functionality in the meantime. Regards, Roger -- .''`. Roger Leigh : :' : Debian GNU/Linux http://people.debian.org/~rleigh/ `. `' schroot and sbuild http://alioth.debian.org/projects/buildd-tools `- GPG Public Key F33D 281D 470A B443 6756 147C 07B3 C8BC 4083 E800 -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to debian-bugs-dist-requ...@lists.debian.org with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact listmas...@lists.debian.org