On Sun, Sep 23, 2012 at 4:30 PM, Tino Reichardt <list-arch@mcmilk.de> wrote:
* Heiko Baums <lists@baums-on-web.de> wrote:
Am Sat, 22 Sep 2012 10:15:16 +0200 schrieb fredbezies <fredbezies@gmail.com>:
Don't you read the *important* word : testing ! Are you blind ?
I read that. And what goes into [testing]? Yes! Bingo! Software version which are released by upstream as *stable*. So yes, upstream was supposed to have this tested before it went into Arch's [testing].
*rofl*
Yes...
And how do [testing] users update their system when initscripts will be removed?
How do you fix a borked Windoze systemd? Right, with a Windoze free LiveCD. How do you fix a borked systemd system? Right, with a systemd free LiveCD. *lol*
Are you stuck in 1690 or are we in the 2010's ?
Even in the 2010's it can be better to stuck with 40 years old, well tested software instead of switching to new crap.
You don't consider that I'm not against new software and new versions, but I'm against crap.
FULL ACK,
Thank you :)
... it's just a Plain Ol' Bug ... nothing special or unique here. it happens, then it gets fixed, and life does in fact go on ... thus sayeth the Almighty Creature in the Sky! really, even the most "stable" of software is inevitably flawed; a few months ago i was prevented from doing damn near any useful work due to an OpenSSL regression: https://bbs.archlinux.org/viewtopic.php?pid=1079535#p1079535 http://rt.openssl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=2771&user=guest&pass=guest ... but i think we all agree openssl is worth keeping around, yes? such exceedingly high standards of "quality" and "stability" are simply unrealistic. systemd works pretty awesome for everything i've thrown at it, and minus a few kinks here and there, flawless as well. of course, YMMV, but i'd surmise 98% of those having difficulties are simply making some small error ... systemd, IME, pretty much does what you'd expect. btw, per Allan's link, the guy who made himself more useful than any of us -- ie, by reporting (gasp!) the bug and including a patch -- concluded with this little gem: "[...] PS: I've been using systemd since v188 (w/o sysvinit) for desktop/laptops (and even in ramroots) and love it. The unit file syntax is nice and intuitive and things mostly work great out-of-the-box. This, is after several years of using Upstart, which worked adequately, but still was not as flexible as it should've been, and a was bit fragile.." ... just some food-for-thought is all. -- C Anthony