Originally posted by Grogan
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Debian To Seek A General Resolution Over Their Init System Policy
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Originally posted by jo-erlend View Post
No, it's not natural to capitalize it like that in our community. However, the systemd developers specifically said the "d" was _not_ to be used in the sense of daemon, but that it should be called System D. Whether they were just joking or not, I don't know, but it seems odd for them to be annoyed at people who were confused by their decision to confuse them.
I don't see how there can be any confusion about the name.
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Originally posted by Britoid View PostIf the X Server goes down, your session is gone with it. The window manager doesn't hold the session.
Therefore, for POS systems I really only use a simple well known working bug free window manager: fvwm2 .
Although from performance and therefore lower cost of SoC, I am looking at wayland too. But what simplified compositor can I use that provides speed as well as rotation, but also stability. Samsung uses enlightenment, and they have years of experience with stable wayland.
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The entitlement of the anti-systemd users that send zero patched but expect others is really annoying.
And fine you are so toxic that you reach your goal and for 1 minute you annoy people, goal reached. Yet this people will then do their live and use and support the next 5 years systemd exclusively completely forget about you and maybe come to such a forum topic in 5 years again, and then the game repeats. Is that really so satisfying to get zero done ever but annoy some people for 5 mins? I mean 1 even admitted that he writes systemd wrong just to get people annoyed.
So being complete looser reaching zero goals but get some people annoyed for 5 minutes that is your live goal? Ok... if that makes you happy... we survive it.
What I also find strange is the consistency, I have sometimes a bad day and make a rant about a current problem, and I go to far but then I move on either I fix the problem or choose something else. If I hold long grudges then more about evilness which means licences companies that screw up others not about technical different opinions.
So I dislike as example that fedora don't have a lts version or something alike, do I spam forums about it? No, I just stop using it when the pain get's to big. Heck I even talk still positive about them.
I do not use gnome anymore because it doesn't fit my usecase anymore but so does no "desktop" only let's call em "programmable window managers" or maybe tiling-wms do the trick for me, but gnome-shell changed my perspective about some desktop metaphors and for some users a tiling-wm is not the way to go, so go gnome go.
Or take Nixos what I am using, sure I get sometimes frustrated about as example their decision to have a stupid configuration language that I disagree on, that combined with often very long response times to bugs (months) sure but I make rant that they have to replace their build / configuration system because I find it dumb? No, I can work around my problems and the advantages of the distro are bigger than this 1 thing which has 1000x bigger implications than the init/logging system.
It's good enough and if the guix system not goes completely nuts on Richard Stallman hate on gnu-websites eventually in 5 years when they finally implement lvm support I probably will switch
And if I would care enough to get so annoyed that I would write 1000 comments about how Nix configuration language sucks I would probably write a lisp compiler that compiles lisp code into that crazy nix language instead.
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Originally posted by zexelon View PostPersonally I think systeMd is all right. I have not actually found it to be any better or worse than init scripts to the average power user... basic users will never know the difference and quite frankly should never have to choose between systeMd or inIt.
When something is in there it cannot understand, it just reboots. It does not give the user an opportunity to pound some sense into systemd, or edit the system.
Fortunately it takes 60s or so to decide to reboot and somehow I could log into his system using ipv6 link local (because he already disabled network manager fortunately so it wouldn't break ipv6), and fix his fstab in that 60s between the boots.
The problem really is: what he did was correct. It's just that systemd thought differently.
Power users however will have the greatest problem trying to do some basic name resolving thanks to systemd-resolver, since it basically puts in a bogus nameserver in resolv.conf after which all DNS functionality as is standardized doesn't work anymore.
If you want to use things like dig, you need to stop systemd-resolved and disable it for life.
The bugs are known and are not going to be fixed BTW, because it was not intended as a valid nameserver. Then why put it in the resolv.conf in the first place... That's what's nsswitch.conf is for.
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btw there would be more low hanging fruit to fix in nixos, as a start guix is able to install a guix package as separate with somethnig like "guix install --file program.lisp", while as far as I know the only way to change/test new packages in nixos is to fork their 10GB package repository and have a local fork of it, and then give 10km long params to use this local version.
Heck if we talk about their tooling and selecting different profiles is also badly done. But the more powerful and feature-full a backend is the crappier the tools are apparently
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Originally posted by Britoid View Post
It literally says on the systemd website that it's systemd and not System D and the d stands for daemon.
I don't see how there can be any confusion about the name.
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Originally posted by 9Strike View PostPls do systemd only. User who don't want to use systemd are using Void or Devuan anyway.
They are barely able to ship a customized Debian, they won't be able to maintain init scripts for all Debian packages themselves.
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Originally posted by starshipeleven View PostDevuan will die pretty quick if Debian truly becomes systemd-only.
They are barely able to ship a customized Debian, they won't be able to maintain init scripts for all Debian packages themselves.
No one should trust a distro with that level of incompetence, imagine if Debian or Fedora did something like that.
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Originally posted by F.Ultra View PostHow was the implementation botched?Originally posted by Hibbelharry View PostWhy is the implementation bodged?
The basic gist of what people take issue with in systemD is that is's a functionally monolithic rat's nest of unstable internal APIs with a massive case of feature creep and a plainly managed by people whose attitude to user feedback and even bug reports can only be described as toxic. There's numerous cases of them trying to brush off legitimate bug reports as "harassment" and just plain refusing to accept a bug report because it doesn't crash or break anything in the use case the reporter discovered it.
Originally posted by Tomin View PostWould you please write it systemd. It's not systemD or SystemD but systemd. Thank you!
So would you prefer I wrote it "System D", "system d" or "systemD"?
Originally posted by pal666 View Postimbeciles who can't spell systemd properly feel entitled to judge its implementation
"When a wise man points at the moon the imbecile stares at the finger"."Why should I want to make anything up? Life's bad enough as it is without wanting to invent any more of it."
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