[Pkg-systemd-maintainers] Bug#721775: systemd: can't umount schroot after reboot
Brian May
bam at debian.org
Wed Sep 4 01:50:44 BST 2013
On 4 September 2013 10:39, Michael Biebl <biebl at debian.org> wrote:
> Am 04.09.2013 01:45, schrieb Brian May:
> > aquitard# umount
> /var/lib/schroot/union/underlay/squeeze-f8ea98e7-1bac-43d1-b774-94c9c42fddc7
> > umount:
> /var/lib/schroot/union/underlay/squeeze-f8ea98e7-1bac-43d1-b774-94c9c42fddc7:
> device is busy.
> > (In some cases useful info about processes that use
> > the device is found by lsof(8) or fuser(1))
> >
> > aquitard# fuser -vm
> /var/lib/schroot/union/underlay/squeeze-f8ea98e7-1bac-43d1-b774-94c9c42fddc7
> > USER PID ACCESS COMMAND
> >
> /var/lib/schroot/union/underlay/squeeze-f8ea98e7-1bac-43d1-b774-94c9c42fddc7:
> > root kernel mount
> /var/lib/schroot/union/underlay/squeeze-f8ea98e7-1bac-43d1-b774-94c9c42fddc7
>
> So I assume after the reboot it is the schroot init script which mounts
> that file system or is that mount point in /etc/fstab?
>
Yes. That is my understanding.
> systemd only mounts a few internal API file systems and what it finds in
> /etc/fstab.
>
pid says kernel, which is somewhat odd.
Does systemd do anything to monitor mounted filesystems, e.g. to run
actions if something changes?
But if I read you correctly, the above means, that there is a running
> mount process which was spawned to mount that lvm volume and that mount
> process did not exit?
>
I don't see any evidence of any mount command still running. "ps auwx |
grep mount" returns nothing.
> And this behaviour you only get with systemd?
>
Yes. That is correct.
Maybe I should try again now, however that would mean another reboot, and
now is not a good time.
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