Probably udev getting started too soon is the issue, since the filesystem becomes writeable if you restart udev. I think I can confirm this. For some reason, on a Raspberry Pi running Debian 9 (Stretch), I cannot write to files from an USB mount script after boot.
Posted by2 years ago
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I'm running into an issue with running a systemd service as a user. For whatever reason Centos 7 is refusing to actually allow me to run things under that context. Whenever i try to enable a service under the user context I get:
Failed to execute operation: Process /bin/false exited with status 1
and when I check on the status of the user service using systemctl status [email protected] i get this:
● [email protected] Loaded: not-found (Reason: No such file or directory) Active: inactive (dead)
which is something that should be loaded by default as far as I can tell. and my google fu isn't strong enough to actually find a way to start it properly under centos 7. any ideas?
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