Without an [options] or similar INI header line pacman config files
in '/etc/pacman.d' can sometimes load incorrectly, for example when
multiple files exist where some of them do and other do not have the
header. We're normalizing our config file here so that it no longer
trips up pacman.
Since unit files are now copied to '/etc/systemd/system' we should
make sure that systemd sees the newest version of all unit files
before we attempt to enable a timer unit.
On each target machine we're storing the Git repo that has our unit
files underneath '/opt/git'. Prior to this commit we used to place
symlinks from '/etc/systemd/system' into the appropriate '/opt/git'
subdir. On most machines this worked fine, however, on some we
encountered a race condition on system start.
Sometimes '/opt/git' is not the same file system as '/'. If that's
the case chances are that systemd initializes the system and fails to
access a unit file at '/opt/git' because that file system is just
barely not yet visible early in the boot process.
For a timer unit for example this could result in enabling the unit
and upon reboot seeing that the unit no longer existed in systemd's
world view e.g. via 'systemctl list-timers' even though the symlink
at '/etc/systemd/system' still pointed to an '/opt/git' subdir when
inspected manually seconds after boot. journalctl, however, would
clearly confirm that at system initialization the symlink target was
inaccessible.
We could fiddle around with delaying boot until '/opt/git' and its
descendants are visible but the sane solution is to just not rely on
a separate file system for important stuff such as unit files. We now
copy unit files to '/etc/systemd/system' instead of symlinking them.