Move fstab in place for Systemd.

git-svn-id: http://svn.linuxfromscratch.org/LFS/branches/systemd/BOOK@10160 4aa44e1e-78dd-0310-a6d2-fbcd4c07a689
This commit is contained in:
Krejzi 2013-02-15 21:20:26 +00:00
parent f3317d4d6e
commit b588d62a25

View File

@ -27,11 +27,6 @@
/dev/<replaceable>&lt;xxx&gt;</replaceable> / <replaceable>&lt;fff&gt;</replaceable> defaults 1 1
/dev/<replaceable>&lt;yyy&gt;</replaceable> swap swap pri=1 0 0
proc /proc proc nosuid,noexec,nodev 0 0
sysfs /sys sysfs nosuid,noexec,nodev 0 0
devpts /dev/pts devpts gid=5,mode=620 0 0
tmpfs /run tmpfs defaults 0 0
devtmpfs /dev devtmpfs mode=0755,nosuid 0 0
# End /etc/fstab</literal>
EOF</userinput></screen>
@ -44,19 +39,6 @@ EOF</userinput></screen>
class="filesystem">ext3</systemitem>. For details on the six
fields in this file, see <command>man 5 fstab</command>.</para>
<!--
<para>The <filename class="directory">/dev/shm</filename> mount point
for <systemitem class="filesystem">tmpfs</systemitem> is included to
allow enabling POSIX-shared memory. The kernel must have the required
support built into it for this to work (more about this is in the next
section). Please note that very little software currently uses
POSIX-shared memory. Therefore, consider the <filename
class="directory">/dev/shm</filename> mount point optional. For more
information, see
<filename>Documentation/filesystems/tmpfs.txt</filename> in the kernel
source tree.</para>
-->
<para>Filesystems with MS-DOS or Windows origin (i.e.: vfat, ntfs, smbfs, cifs,
iso9660, udf) need the <quote>iocharset</quote> mount option in order for
non-ASCII characters in file names to be interpreted properly. The value
@ -96,8 +78,6 @@ EOF</userinput></screen>
<quote>Default iocharset for FAT</quote> (<option>CONFIG_FAT_DEFAULT_IOCHARSET</option>).
There is no way to specify these settings for the
ntfs filesystem at kernel compilation time.</para>
<!-- Personally, I find it more foolproof to always specify the iocharset and
codepage in /etc/fstab for MS-based filesystems - Alexander E. Patrakov -->
<para>It is possible to make the ext3 filesystem reliable across power
failures for some hard disk types. To do this, add the