On Fri, May 25, 2012 at 02:57:27PM +0100, Roger Leigh wrote:
> On Fri, May 25, 2012 at 02:12:32PM +0200, Cyril Brulebois wrote:
> > Roger Leigh (25/05/2012):
> > > We previously didn't enable this for upgrades primarily because it
> > > wasn't possible to. It wasn't possible to upgrade /etc/defau
On Fri, May 25, 2012 at 02:12:32PM +0200, Cyril Brulebois wrote:
> Roger Leigh (25/05/2012):
> > We previously didn't enable this for upgrades primarily because it
> > wasn't possible to. It wasn't possible to upgrade /etc/default/rcS.
> > Also, quite a few people complained about the semantics o
Roger Leigh (25/05/2012):
> We previously didn't enable this for upgrades primarily because it
> wasn't possible to. It wasn't possible to upgrade /etc/default/rcS.
> Also, quite a few people complained about the semantics of RAM* in
> rcS changing since it used to refer to /var/* rather than the
On Fri, May 25, 2012 at 09:44:50AM +0200, Cyril Brulebois wrote:
> from previous “RAMTMP isn't so bad” IRC sessions, it appears it's
> supposed to be on for new installations, and not turned on during
> upgrades.
We previously didn't enable this for upgrades primarily because it
wasn't possible to
Package: initscripts
Version: 2.88dsf-22.1
Severity: grave
Justification: fucks up systems during upgrade
Hi,
from previous “RAMTMP isn't so bad” IRC sessions, it appears it's
supposed to be on for new installations, and not turned on during
upgrades.
Except it is.
Reproducibility:
- install a
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