pulseaudio y systemd, the same sh*t
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New Group Calls For Boycotting Systemd
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Originally posted by halo9en View PostTL;DR. Megabytes of code (and heap) in pid 1 is something I am grumpy about. But it boots faster than sysv, shuts down immediately, no crashes so far, and no better alternatives from the boycott crowd, so, meh.
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Originally posted by robclark View Posttbh, a consolodated log isn't really such a bad thing. It will save me a lot of effort remote debugging things with users. ("Hmm, ok, can you send me Xorg.0.log... ok, no there there, can you send me dmesg? Hmm, I wonder where gnome-shell logs end up.."). In fact, if you take a step back from the drama and look at it a bit more objectively, it is kind of crazy that we *haven't* had a unified log yet.
I also wish people to abandon this /usr/everything idiocy. This /usr only appeared due to lack of space on some machine, eons ago. Now everyone uses this awkward crap and the result is a really weird filesystem hierarchy. Why /usr/bin instead of just /bin? And so on.
btw, anyone noticed that boycott systemd abbreviated == BSD :-P. So I guess they just afraid their system administration skills would be obsolete when it comes to Linux. But most BSDs elected to drift down the river like an axe from the town of Byron - they do not even try to improve something or do something new. Perfect choice for system administrators... who are retired and too lazy to learn new tricks.
Last edited by 0xBADCODE; 03 September 2014, 09:41 AM.
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Originally posted by 0xBADCODE View PostI also wish people to abandon this /usr/everything idiocy. This /usr only appeared due to lack of space on some machine, eons ago. Now everyone uses this awkward crap and the result is a really weird filesystem hierarchy. Why /usr/bin instead of just /bin? And so on.
What is an idiocy is trying to fix what is not broken. This is in part what Gnome 3, pulseaudio and now systemd have been doing, even when it is being done accidentally by the way it is being introduced and developed. They all have been introduced while being far from feature-complete.
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Originally posted by sdack View PostWhat is an idiocy is trying to fix what is not broken. This is in part what Gnome 3, pulseaudio and now systemd have been doing, even when it is being done accidentally by the way it is being introduced and developed. They all have been introduced while being far from feature-complete.
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lol lol, this nutjobs.
I am open to some folks that maybe fork something or switch distro to a distro that dont use systemd.
And I am totaly open when they somthing polite discuss what disadvantages it has.
To have choices is a good thing.
But always this childish troll rants.
FUCK-THIS-SYSTEMD-CRAP.org or something similar. Like world goes to shit because of this software is just so stupid.
Just create always drama the "linux" community is all about big dramatic reality series.
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Originally posted by Paul Frederick View Postpussaudio is not accepted here.
Thanks to Lennart Poettering Linux finally got a system-wide sound deamon, instead of several incompatible DE based sound deamons. It was an almost impossible job to do, but it was executed brilliantly with excellent backwards compatibility and without rewriting the entire sound system or all audio drivers.
Sure, Pulseaudio exposed many many bugs in both ALSA and the sound drivers. I got hit too, since the drivers to my rather obscure internal sound chip was flaky to begin with. I had to use a pci sound-card for quite some time until the bugs where fixed.
But I don't look back to the time before Pulseaudio with rose tinted glasses. Sound on Linux simply sucked and was embarrassingly dysfunctional compared to MS-Windows and Mac OS.
Pulseaudio was a pioneering effort that made the sound system on Linux modern and usable. Even if you don't use Pulseaudio, but just ALSA, you still benefit from the effort, since Pulseaudio became the coordinated developer nexus where sound chip drivers and ALSA could be debugged in a coordinated effort.
Sound on Linux just works and have done for a long time, and Pulseaudio developers like Poettering are a major reason why it is so.
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Originally posted by ryao View Post
I hate having to restart after updates. It's one of the things I love about linux (vs Windows), not having to restart after updates. And there's going to be increased attack surface with systemd use?
I have always been a big fan of Upstart. And was disappointed to see it "lose" in Ubuntu. But if systemd really is bringing what the ewontfix.com/14 article says, I don't see myself staying on a Linux desktop.
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