On Mon, 2011-06-13 at 16:23 +0200, jdd wrote:
Le 13/06/2011 14:24, Michal Vyskocil a écrit :
And yes, when the whole logic of service run/start/restart is now a part of systemd, so no need to reimplement it again and again.
in early SuSE times, the manual had a *very good* initscript description.
We probably need the same thing for systemd. May be it's already done (where?)
a question directly on subject: the init scripts are treated differently from distro to distro (debian init 3, 5... are not the openSUSE ones). Is it the same for systemd or is the interface unified? this would be a great enhancement for people having to manage different distros.
There are no native run-levels in systemd. It can have any number of 'sets of services', whicyh are called targets and have textual names. The default systemd targets are the same on all distros. Native service files have no notion of a SYSV runlevels, they hook only into systemd targets. The runlevel mapping in systemd only affect SYSV compatibiliy which will go away over time. Some of the smaller, embedded-focused, or newer distros already switched to systemd and dropped (compile switch) SYSV support entirely. The concept of runlevels will fade out over time. Kay -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse-factory+unsubscribe@opensuse.org For additional commands, e-mail: opensuse-factory+help@opensuse.org