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If any devices are marked with 'SYSTEMD_READY=0' then we shouldn't run any btrfs check on them. Indeed there's no point in running "btrfs ready" on devices that already have SYSTEMD_READY=0 set. Most probably such devices are members of a higher layer aggregate device such as dm-multipath or software RAID. Doing IO on them wastes time at best, and may cause delays, timeouts, or even hangs at worst (think active-passive multipath or degraded RAID, for example). It was initially reported at: https://bugzilla.opensuse.org/show_bug.cgi?id=872929 |
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50-udev-default.rules.in | ||
60-block.rules | ||
60-cdrom_id.rules | ||
60-drm.rules | ||
60-evdev.rules | ||
60-input-id.rules | ||
60-persistent-alsa.rules | ||
60-persistent-input.rules | ||
60-persistent-storage-tape.rules | ||
60-persistent-storage.rules | ||
60-persistent-v4l.rules | ||
60-sensor.rules | ||
60-serial.rules | ||
64-btrfs.rules.in | ||
70-joystick.rules | ||
70-mouse.rules | ||
70-touchpad.rules | ||
75-net-description.rules | ||
75-probe_mtd.rules | ||
78-sound-card.rules | ||
80-drivers.rules | ||
80-net-setup-link.rules | ||
99-systemd.rules.in | ||
meson.build |