Ludovic Courtès schreef op wo 01-06-2022 om 18:38 [+0200]: > There’s a talk by Lennart Poettering where he explains that, contrary to > what one might think, “chown -R $HOME” turns out to be fast enough that > systemd-homed can do that unconditionally (off the of my head). Interesting. Taking "find $HOME > /dev/null" as an approximation of how long "chown -R $HOME" would take: $ time find . > /dev/null real 0m7,066s user 0m0,427s sys 0m1,341s Assuming that ‘unconditionally = only chown -R $HOME if the uid of $HOME isn't what was expected’ (otherwise, +7sec for every boot), that's not too bad. That's on a SSD and not a hard disk though, I'd image it would be worse on a hard disk. Depending on the size of $HOME, it could be a lot longer though: $ time find /gnu/store > /dev/null real 1m9,729s user 0m4,135s sys 0m13,840s Might still be acceptable as long as uids aren't switched too often ... Can we, as-is in Guix, assume we can modify /home/foo though? E.g. what if it's put on a separate storage medium not attached at boot. Greetings, Maxime.