On Sat, August 23, 2014 8:42 am, William Woods wrote:
You are whining about something FREE dont like it, dont use it .if you had a PAID RHEL sub, upstream to Cent, on then bitch ..but whining about something free, well
Was I that unclear that I sounded like the one who keeps whining? I tried to say that the moment we could affect anything has past a year or two ago. That was the time the systemd introduction into all Linuxes was made. It is done deal now, and the last one of the major distros - debian (and its clones) - goes systemd in next release. So, it is not RH, it is all of them built on Linux kernel...
And yes, I did start using something else (FreeBSD) for servers a while ago. Also free. Also open source. Better suited for servers in my book (your mileage may differ ;-)
Alas, not all of the decisions that are made in/by open source programmer (steering) teams can be affected by us. They are achieved in the battles, and there are arguments "on our side" that are made then. But. As I said to one of my users: KDE-3 person, who hates KDE-4, stays with KDE-3 while it lasts. Brilliant programmers who create this software need to make progress as _they_ see it. And this (making these fundamental for us changes) often is their only reward for the great programming job they are doing. Let's be grateful to them.
And as we know, not all of the changes is really a progress, even if they give you very fast boot as systemd does, or pretend to give you more security as SELinux advertizes in its name. I was displeased by introduction of SELinux into mainstream kernel back then. As, it is not a good defense in a first place (can it be if you can switch it off on the fly? and after that things are as if it is not there). On the other hand it is extra dozens of thousands of lines of code in the kernel, which may have bugs with security implications. Which down the road proved to be true - search for SELinux security patch. Still, even disagreeing with something I kept living with it for quire some time. But one day the time came to switch servers to better (in my book; your mileage may be different ;-) alternative. Oh, yes, I should have mentioned SELinux competitive security solution. it was LIDS (Linux Intrusion Detection System). The name is a bit confusing. In three words: It was sort of kernel patch that after boot demotes root to user nobody. So after boot you can not administer the system at all. On the fly the system is locked. Dead locked. Makes more sense to me (security wise) than SELinux, but SELinux made it into mainstream kernel instead of LIDS...
The suggestion you made to switch to commercial system [sorry I brought your suggestion one step further in the same direction, oh I'm really tricky person] is quite in line with what commercial vendors would like to happen to free (as free beer) competitive software: users, feel this free software is as nasty as our commercial alternative is. So you may look at better sides of commercial software, and come back to us. This may be strategic thought behind such events as acquisition of widest used database mysql by most famous database company oracle. Another example may be proving an opposite (I mean cups acquired by Apple, the reason here could be mere survival of cups that Apple is going to keep using themselves).
So, for good or for bad, after letting all of our steam out about bad decisions in the system we love or used to love (and I was happy with Linux, - RedHat and CentOS in particular, - for much longer than decade) we can bite the bullet, realize that the life is such, and Linux from now on is such, and start continuing our life with Linux (while the enterprise life cycle lasts ;-) or with alternatives, - those of us who found them more adequate.
One way or another whining of all of us who is displeased only serves to let our own steam out.
Valeri
On Aug 23, 2014, at 8:38 AM, Valeri Galtsev galtsev@kicp.uchicago.edu wrote:
On Sat, August 23, 2014 5:00 am, me@tdiehl.org wrote:
I hate network mangler as much as the next guy but is it really worth all of the whining when all it takes to disable it is:
It would be worth "whining about it" if anybody of decision makers ever listened to these complaints. As some day "reverting to old behavior" option will be gone. But most likely no one will listen to all our "whining", and all the decisions are already made at least a year ago... so you probably are 100% right: all our whining serves is just to let our own steam out. Once we realize it we start looking for alternatives, - for the servers at least.
Valeri
++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ Valeri Galtsev Sr System Administrator Department of Astronomy and Astrophysics Kavli Institute for Cosmological Physics University of Chicago Phone: 773-702-4247 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ _______________________________________________ CentOS mailing list CentOS@centos.org http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos
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++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ Valeri Galtsev Sr System Administrator Department of Astronomy and Astrophysics Kavli Institute for Cosmological Physics University of Chicago Phone: 773-702-4247 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++