On Fri, Oct 10, 2014 at 3:56 PM, Reindl Harald h.reindl@thelounge.net wrote:
Am 10.10.2014 um 22:38 schrieb Les Mikesell:
On Fri, Oct 10, 2014 at 3:18 PM, Chris Adams linux@cmadams.net wrote:
Once upon a time, Marko Vojinovic vvmarko@gmail.com said:
I don't really see how systemd violates the "do one thing and do it well" philosophy.
systemd (as PID 1) is not necessarily the problem. The problem IMHO is the systemd _project_ that appears to have a severe case of scope creep. They have swallowed up other projects (udev, dbus), reinvented wheels (logging, ntp, network configuration), and appear to still be growing without bounds. When people don't like some of the decisions of systemd developers, and the systemd project keeps taking over more of the core OS functionality, it is frustrating to watch.
There's probably nothing wrong with these things in the context of a new/different OS oriented to servicing a single user who is assumed to own the world as a side effect of logging into a magical console device and starting a GUI where things can pop into existence and chat with other things easily. But it doesn't have much to do with unix-like concepts
bullshit proven by running servers with systemd over 3 years *headless* with multiple users for
- vpn
- sftp with mysqld based users and groups
- rdp
- http
- smtp
- pop3
- imap
- smb
- afp
- dns
- epp
- dhcp
- ftp
- ntp
- mysqld
- firewalls / gateways
- routers
and well, worksations too
so *just shut up* thelling abody shit about "a single user"
What happens to ownership of a DVD or audio device when a different user logs in at the console - even if some other remote user wants to access them? The magic is more about ConsoleKit and PolicyKit than specifically systemd but the underlying dbus gunk seems to be merging together.