I installed the new 9.10, the first time I use something different than slackware, and configured nfs so I can access my files on my file-server.
It worked until I installed bug-fixes I got offered from some sort of tool, if I remember right about 162 files/packages.
Now the rpc.statd wont start on startup. If I go into the emergency-shell as offered, I can start the statd and mount my home dirs.
So my question is. Where the statd gets started?
The syslog gives no news.
Its not running.
Any suggestions.
Ah. I found the statd script in init.d. Maybe it is a problem with my board?
I have a tyan S4985 with 16 Cores. Maybe the upstart thingy have problems with massive parallel execution?
How to start things normal. Step by step. So it would be easier to control the order processes start?
Solved:
Every process has its own user. I lost the statd user in between.
It worked until I installed bug-fixes I got offered from some sort of tool, if I remember right about 162 files/packages.
Now the rpc.statd wont start on startup. If I go into the emergency-shell as offered, I can start the statd and mount my home dirs.
So my question is. Where the statd gets started?
The syslog gives no news.
Its not running.
Any suggestions.
Ah. I found the statd script in init.d. Maybe it is a problem with my board?
I have a tyan S4985 with 16 Cores. Maybe the upstart thingy have problems with massive parallel execution?
How to start things normal. Step by step. So it would be easier to control the order processes start?
Solved:
Every process has its own user. I lost the statd user in between.
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