On 11/22/2011 12:43 AM, Linda Walsh wrote:
Bruno Friedmann wrote:
For thoses I saw telling that they don't use systemd, prepare yourself to cry. We offer sysvinit as a fallback this time (12.1) nothing prove that will be the
case in future releases.
Not a problem as long as it doesn't require special partitioning needs that require I reformat my system.
Nope, it does not.
(currently these are separate partitions...that has proven helpful more often than hindrance: sysdirs: /, /var, /tmp, /usr /var/cache (sysdirs) (FWIW:/var/rtmp is 'rbound' to /tmp, so present @boot) + various user level dirs... (/home, /Share, /backups, etc...)
Shouldn't be a problem.
As long as systemd gives me the same control and ease of use/maintenance, that's great. I'd **assume**, it was designed to support, AT LEAST, the minimum features of the existing sytem boot process, and then was enhanced, like any well designed replacement/rewrite?
It's different, so you have to learn a bit more but then it contains more features and is easier to use. And your existing LSB init scripts will continue to work.
(If not, that would already bias me to wonder about the designer's design 'sense', though, I'm easily convinced in the presence of irrefutable logic... ;-)
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