Thanks for your help and the replies. So this issue is now resolved.
Summary of Issue:
Mounting root as read-only as documented in
(https://wiki.debian.org/ReadonlyRoot) because rootfs is busy.
Summary of Solution:
1. 'lsof +L1' showed cupsd getting stuck on /etc/passwd (deleted).
Looking a
On Thu 06 Mar 2014 at 23:05:20 +, Amit wrote:
> 0) After reboot and running 'lsof +L1':
> COMMAND PID USER FD TYPE DEVICE SIZE/OFF NLINK NODE NAME
> cupsd935 root8r REG8,1 1392 0 132095
> /etc/passwd (deleted)
I upgraded my wheezy install to jess
On Thu, Mar 06, 2014 at 11:05:20PM +, Amit wrote:
> 0) After reboot and running 'lsof +L1':
> COMMAND PID USER FD TYPE DEVICE SIZE/OFF NLINK NODE NAME
> cupsd935 root8r REG8,1 1392 0 132095
> /etc/passwd (deleted)
So it's reproducible.
> 1) Shut
Reco gmail.com> writes:
>
> Can you do the following, please:
>
> 1) Shutdown cups by systemd's way (systemctl blahblah …).
>
> 2) Start it by /etc/init.d/cups start.
>
> 3) Confirm with lsof whenever /etc/passwd is kept open.
>
> 4) While you're at it, invoke 'fuser /etc/passwd' to ensure t
On Thu, 6 Mar 2014 18:35:06 + (UTC)
Amit wrote:
> Reco gmail.com> writes:
>
> >
> > https://wiki.debian.org/ReadonlyRoot#cups says:
> >
> > CUPS stores any kind of state files under /etc (classes.conf,
> > cupsd.conf, printers.conf subscriptions.conf) and upstream is against
> > any modif
Brian cityscape.co.uk> writes:
>
> On Thu 06 Mar 2014 at 01:21:03 +, Amit wrote:
>
> > I need cups, so is there a way around this?
>
> This doesn't answer your question but I have a spare Wheezy with
> separate /, /home, and /var. I installed systemd, made the rootfs
> ro in fstab and boot
Robin gmail.com> writes:
>
> Just a suggestion have you tried a re-install of cups since fresh
> install of systemd
>
Thanks for the reply.
Yes, the first thing I did was install systemd and then all the other
packages but anyways I tried reinstalling again but no luck.
--
To UNSUBSCRIBE,
Reco gmail.com> writes:
>
> https://wiki.debian.org/ReadonlyRoot#cups says:
>
> CUPS stores any kind of state files under /etc (classes.conf,
> cupsd.conf, printers.conf subscriptions.conf) and upstream is against
> any modification.
>
> Personally I worked around similar problem by moving /et
Hi.
On Thu, 6 Mar 2014 14:49:30 +
Brian wrote:
> On Thu 06 Mar 2014 at 01:21:03 +, Amit wrote:
>
> > I need cups, so is there a way around this?
>
> This doesn't answer your question but I have a spare Wheezy with
> separate /, /home, and /var. I installed systemd, made the rootfs
> r
On 6 March 2014 01:21, Amit wrote:
> Amit gmail.com> writes:
>
> [snip]
>
>>
>> However, setting up a fresh install of systemd, the readonly does not
>> have any effect. The rootfs is still mounted as rw. All I did was
>> changed /etc/fstab. Based on the systemd man pages, this should be
>> enoug
On Thu 06 Mar 2014 at 01:21:03 +, Amit wrote:
> I need cups, so is there a way around this?
This doesn't answer your question but I have a spare Wheezy with
separate /, /home, and /var. I installed systemd, made the rootfs
ro in fstab and booted with init=/lib/systemd/systemd. The rootfs
was
Amit gmail.com> writes:
[snip]
>
> However, setting up a fresh install of systemd, the readonly does not
> have any effect. The rootfs is still mounted as rw. All I did was
> changed /etc/fstab. Based on the systemd man pages, this should be
> enough.
>
> How do I go about debugging/fixing thi
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