Well, either case is embarrasing. If the network is up after the user
logins, that's ridiculous, even Windows start his services before the login
screen. If NM, thus the network, is *slow* to start, that's worse! Isn't
supposed systemd would speed up the boot process?
This is worse than the "kill user's background processes after logout" case.
Thanks for sharing.
On Fri, Jul 15, 2016 at 6:22 PM, Simon Hobson <linux@???>
wrote:
>
> On 15 Jul 2016, at 18:10, Emiliano Marini <emilianomarini82@???>
> wrote:
>
> > Are you serious network isn't started before user login? This is... You
> can't be serious. Link please?
>
> Ah, I'd mis-rembered the thread. The frontend was consistently not
> starting.
>
> http://lists.mythtv.org/pipermail/mythtv-users/2016-July/387810.html
>
> > For me on Mythbuntu 16.04 it looks like the network is slow to start
> because
> > the network interface details are not set by the NetworkManager software
> > until the user-login is complete.
>
> Now whether that's because it doesn't start until user login, or because
> it's been set to auto-login at start and the network manager is just slow I
> don't know. But it's fail (by some definition of fail) that it's even
> starting login before the network is up (by whatever definition of up you
> use).
>
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