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This seems to me like very happy news indeed, but I'm interested in contrary |
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opinions. There's a recent thread discussing how udev-197 breaks lvm2, but |
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that's a trivial fix once you know about it. |
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The problem is caused because many apps including lvm2 install their udev |
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config scripts in /usr/lib/udev/rules.d/ (where they never belonged in the |
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first place IMO) and they should instead now go in /lib/udev/rules.d/. |
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All you need to do is to re-emerge all of those packages *after* installing |
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udev-197 and the config scripts will go in the correct place. |
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You should do this before rebooting the machine because lvm2 won't work until |
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its udev scripts are in the correct directory. |
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Doesn't this seem to fix the problem with booting a separate /usr partition? |