It may be of interest to observe that future releases of Ubuntu (after 14.04) will no longer use upstart but systemd.
Ref: [Mark Shuttleworth » Blog Archive » Losing graciously](http://www.markshuttleworth.com/archives/1316)
In the strict context of this bug report which aims at having traditional chroot work in an upstart context, this information should be considered a workaround at best.
In the broader context of making some software future-proof, systemd seems like the target to study. Systemd provides containers which can be thought of like "chroot done right".
Good news is: it appears one can test systemd with existing Ubuntu releases (from 13.04 onward, I haven't tested myself):
# Workaround and future
It may be of interest to observe that future releases of Ubuntu (after 14.04) will no longer use upstart but systemd. www.markshuttle worth.com/ archives/ 1316)
Ref: [Mark Shuttleworth » Blog Archive » Losing graciously](http://
In the strict context of this bug report which aims at having traditional chroot work in an upstart context, this information should be considered a workaround at best.
In the broader context of making some software future-proof, systemd seems like the target to study. Systemd provides containers which can be thought of like "chroot done right".
Good news is: it appears one can test systemd with existing Ubuntu releases (from 13.04 onward, I haven't tested myself):
* [How can I replace upstart with systemd? - Ask Ubuntu](http:// askubuntu. com/questions/ 420917/ how-can- i-replace- upstart- with-systemd) /wiki.ubuntu. com/systemd)
* [systemd - Ubuntu Wiki](https:/
Thank you for your attention.