You have a somewhat unusual set of point points there.
Well, I know.
But I use to use different fs types and fs parameters (and mount options)
as various filesystem parts have different functionality and operating modes.
E.g. traditional news spool on a Usenet News server needs lo-o-ots of inodes.
Fix for now: reboot so that all "problem" filesystems are left
unmounted (or manually unmount all of them), then change the context
type of the mountpoint directories to mnt_t:
# chcon -t mnt_t /var/run /var/spool /var/lock
Thank you.
And a bit more questions, if you let me.
Once the problem is in the context of mount points,
then how does post-startup manual `mount -a' succeed?
I believe it would fail quite in the same manner, wouldn't it?
And why don't other ``unusual'' filesystems (I have several others)
fail in the same way, but get mounted during startup quite successfully?
Aren't there some race conditions?
QingLong.