While, as far as I experienced, killing gssd it is a fine way to not be able to do anything, if /usr is mounted on an nfs4 system that is. (And now I'm not even sure if gssd is at fault, or if this an nfs4 problem).
While, as far as I experienced, killing gssd it is a fine way to not be able to do anything, if /usr is mounted on an nfs4 system that is. (And now I'm not even sure if gssd is at fault, or if this an nfs4 problem).