Anton Aylward wrote:
Marc Chamberlin said the following on 04/10/2013 08:06 PM:
it is that simple, and works. The learning curve is sometimes very steep and there are lots of "magic" commands that not everyone is familiar with. I'd say the opposite. Having a sea of command line commands What's this about the see? There aren't many commands;
See "Options" and "Specifiers" (table) Each of those command you mentioned below also take multiple options most options take text inputs of other files you must create. The entire skeleton of systemd files needs to be created and understood to fit a service in. I would point out that the suse implementors believe it impossible to create backwards compatible systemd files to *allow* the *option* of booting from disk and have separate root and /usr file systems. That is trivial in sysVinit scripts. If the learning curve in systemd is not so steep, why wasn't anyone in SuSE able to figure this out before rolling 12.3? I'd say the results speak for themselves about how easy it is to get things right in systemd. NOTE: that doesn't mean the end product might not be better than what you have in sysVinit -- but things that handle alot more situations and are more comprehensive are almost always more difficult to configure in the first place. -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org To contact the owner, e-mail: opensuse+owner@opensuse.org