Sefa Eyeoglu <sefa@mailbox.org> on Mon, 2019/10/28 10:06:
On Montag, 28. Oktober 2019 09:46:57 CET Christian Hesse wrote:
Sefa Eyeoglu via arch-general <arch-general@archlinux.org> on Sun, 2019/10/27 15:37:
[...] As you can see, I have an encrypted root partition. Before switching to systemd hooks, after typing the decryption password on boot there was no additional output. Now there is always the full systemd log where it says "Starting [unit]..." and so on. [...]
If a unit takes too long to start systemd switches to verbose mode for possible issue diagnose. Everything is correct and you take too long to type your passphrase. ;)
Thanks for the info.
Is there an easy way to set the timeout?
From man systemd(1): systemd.show_status Takes a boolean argument or the constant auto. Can be also specified without an argument, with the same effect as a positive boolean. If enabled, the systemd manager (PID 1) shows terse service status updates on the console during bootup. auto behaves like false until a unit fails or there is a significant delay in boot. Defaults to enabled, unless quiet is passed as kernel command line option, in which case it defaults to auto. If specified overrides the system manager configuration file option ShowStatus=, see systemd-system.conf(5). However, the process command line option --show-status= takes precedence over both this kernel command line option and the configuration file option. So you can disable this functionality, but not sure if you can set a timeout. -- main(a){char*c=/* Schoene Gruesse */"B?IJj;MEH" "CX:;",b;for(a/* Best regards my address: */=0;b=c[a++];) putchar(b-1/(/* Chris cc -ox -xc - && ./x */b/42*2-3)*42);}