These services represent the parts of the keymaps and termencoding
services which saved the settings back to the root file system so they
can be loaded very early in the boot process.
These are needed to allow keymaps and termencoding to run earlier in the
boot sequence.
X-Gentoo-Bug: 446018
X-Gentoo-Bug-URL: https://bugs.gentoo.org/show_bug.cgi?id=446018
Initially, we were creating tmpfiles entries in the sysinit runlevel and
again in the boot runlevel. Systemd runs the --create and --remove
options in one service called systemd-tmpfiles-setup after the local
file systems are mounted. Now we have a service called tmpfiles.setup
which emulates this.
This also closes the bug mentioned below, since we were originally
writing to files that were on read-only file systems and that were not
available.
Reported-by: <devurandom@gmx.net>
X-Gentoo-Bug: 439012
X-Gentoo-Bug-URL: https://bugs.gentoo.org/show_bug.cgi?id=439012
Now that the tmpfiles.d code is more tested, actually call it from
init.d. It assumes that /run is already available when it runs.
Please note it runs TWICE.
- During sysinit, ideally just after /dev/shm is created, but before
udev has started. After udev is also acceptable, but not ideal.
- During boot, ideally just after localmount has completed.
Signed-off-by: Robin H. Johnson <robbat2@gentoo.org>
the mtime of a file. It saves the shutdown time to this file also.
This is handy for systems without a working RTC chip.
Based on an idea by Michael A. Smith <michael@smith-li.com>.
Fixes Gentoo #272073.
Split halt.sh into halt, killprocs, romount and savecache services.
The reboot runlevel is removed but mapped to shutdown.
The halt script should be moved to the sysvinit package.