Am 14.08.2012 15:08, schrieb Baho Utot:
Wow, this sounds so much like a conspiracy theory. The fact is that the people who write the code inevitably dictate which software is maintained, based on their interests and convictions, and they're pretty much unanimous that systemd is a better solution to the problem of booting and maintaining daemons than the solution we currently have.
So yeah, I guess that's been the game plan all along: make booting and daemon control more consistent, faster, and easier for most users to maintain.
Paul
I don't understand your point....
What is so wrong with the booting using sysvinit?
I really don't need what systemd offers and sysvinit does everything I need and has not failed me.
And you don't want systemd because you are sure it won't do what sysvinit can, even though you didn't try it.
So is your point that I need to move to systemd because the developers tell me I must?
You need to move because the rest of the Linux ecosystem will require systemd at some point, just like it now requires udev. If you don't like it, then stop annoying us and start maintaining code that makes sure YOUR way will keep working. It's like that: Whoever contributes code makes the decisions.
As for systemd being better solution for the problem of booting the beauty is in the eye of the beholder and I just don't see it, so why take away sysvint?
I could repeat what I said above.
You can use systemd and I should be able to use what works for me and not be forced down the systemd path.
So, you are annoying the whole mailing list because you don't like that you _might_ be forced to switch to a superior booting scheme which is unlikely to affect you negatively in any way. Arch's policy on systemd vs. initscripts has not even been discussed among Arch developers yet, and nothing has been decided. Yet, you guys are acting like someone's going to eat your childrn. I can't stand this anymore. I want to just add replaces=('initscripts') to the systemd package just to make this fucking "discussion" stop. If you don't have anything _technical_ to discuss, and don't have any problem that you want help solving, then move this bullshit somewhere I don't have to see it. I wonder if there is a way to lock a thread in mailman.