On Mon, 2009-11-23 at 17:58 +0100, Per Jessen wrote:
Lars Müller wrote:
On Sat, Nov 21, 2009 at 12:11:25PM +0000, G T Smith wrote: [ 8< ]
This are the first observations on the direction openSuSE seems to be taking that echoes a concern of mine. Although it vigorously denied there is increasing emphasis on the home user desktop and a benign neglect of other areas elsewhere, the end product seems to undermine that denial. The change not to enable the openssh daemon with any new install doesn't say anything about the directions of the openSUSE project. Well, I think we are a few community and project members that disagree with that, Lars.
I agree with Lars. This is a trivial, and rather obvious, change. It doesn't indicate any kind of grand conspiracy.
For those of us using Linux for a long time this doesn't cause much of extra work. We're able to enable the service via YaST or might even use chkconfig -a ssh on the command line. From the networking setup summary it is one click at installation time. Many of us who have been using Linux for a long time can put together a system from scratch with one hand tied on our backs - doesn't mean we want to.
So. Equating enabling a service with assembling a distro? That's absurd. "sudo /sbin/chkconfig sshd on"
And while all had been able to complain and to offend none had been able to write something at http://en.opensuse.org/Ssh http://de.opensuse.org/SSH-Server (funny, it seems to need one or two updates).
So... update it! -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org For additional commands, e-mail: opensuse+help@opensuse.org