On Tue, Aug 21, 2012 at 9:10 PM, Felipe Contreras <felipe.contreras@gmail.com> wrote:
On Wed, Aug 22, 2012 at 1:48 AM, Patrick Murphy <thegerdur@gmail.com> wrote:
Could you give me a brief explanation as to why init scripts are better? I'm newish to Unix style operating systems
As I said; they are tried-and-true since *decades*, all the problems have been ironed out by slow small changes, so if somebody has problems they are probably hitting very few people.
Switching to systemd is not a small change, it's a revolutionary change, with the potential to break many people's boot (it has broken things in Fedora, and openSUSE, and it's happening in Arch Linux as well). So, a sensible person would wait until a sensible time to make the big switch (which is clearly not now).
Arch initscripts don't have "decades" of history. At most, one decade (Arch celebrated 10 years some months ago). It was tailor made for Arch and has been extremely streched over the years to do very good things, but it clearly shows its age. -- A: Because it obfuscates the reading. Q: Why is top posting so bad? For more information, please read: http://idallen.com/topposting.html ------------------------------------------- Denis A. Altoe Falqueto Linux user #524555 -------------------------------------------