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/freebsd-10.0-release/etc/rc.d/ | ||
H A D | resolv | diff 240336 Tue Sep 11 03:11:42 MDT 2012 obrien Simply things so that "#REQUIRE: FILESYSTEMS" means the file systems are fully "ready to go". 'FILESYSTEMS' states: "This is a dummy dependency, for services which require file systems to be mounted before starting." However, we have 'var' which is was run after 'FILESYSTEMS' and can mount /var if it already isn't mounted. Furthermore, several scripts cannot use /var until 'cleanvar' has done its thing. Thus "FILESYSTEMS" hasn't really meant all critical file systems are fully usable. |
H A D | var | diff 240336 Tue Sep 11 03:11:42 MDT 2012 obrien Simply things so that "#REQUIRE: FILESYSTEMS" means the file systems are fully "ready to go". 'FILESYSTEMS' states: "This is a dummy dependency, for services which require file systems to be mounted before starting." However, we have 'var' which is was run after 'FILESYSTEMS' and can mount /var if it already isn't mounted. Furthermore, several scripts cannot use /var until 'cleanvar' has done its thing. Thus "FILESYSTEMS" hasn't really meant all critical file systems are fully usable. |
H A D | jail | diff 240336 Tue Sep 11 03:11:42 MDT 2012 obrien Simply things so that "#REQUIRE: FILESYSTEMS" means the file systems are fully "ready to go". 'FILESYSTEMS' states: "This is a dummy dependency, for services which require file systems to be mounted before starting." However, we have 'var' which is was run after 'FILESYSTEMS' and can mount /var if it already isn't mounted. Furthermore, several scripts cannot use /var until 'cleanvar' has done its thing. Thus "FILESYSTEMS" hasn't really meant all critical file systems are fully usable. |
H A D | netif | diff 240336 Tue Sep 11 03:11:42 MDT 2012 obrien Simply things so that "#REQUIRE: FILESYSTEMS" means the file systems are fully "ready to go". 'FILESYSTEMS' states: "This is a dummy dependency, for services which require file systems to be mounted before starting." However, we have 'var' which is was run after 'FILESYSTEMS' and can mount /var if it already isn't mounted. Furthermore, several scripts cannot use /var until 'cleanvar' has done its thing. Thus "FILESYSTEMS" hasn't really meant all critical file systems are fully usable. |
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