On Mon, Sep 29, 2014 at 06:36:15PM -0400, Dirk Gently wrote:
Sam M. wrote:
Some more education about Systemd: https://access.redhat.com/videos/403833
Oh, now we have to waste even more time watching videos to manage this pile of crap...
that I agree with.
Hint.. if your init system needs fucking VIDEOS for people to understand waht's going on, then guess what...it's too fucking arcane and complicated for what an INIT system is supposed to be doing.
that I don't necessarly agree with. The video part, that I agree with. the complexity ... eh. the scripts that run sysV are masterworks written by very advanced shell script authors. I know shell scripting. It has taken years to learn shell scripting decently. I wish those siystem start up scripts were written in perl. They are hard to understand and they are intertwined with many system files which make them further difficult to understand. that being said, I can replace any of them fairly quickly and i have. The more you work with systems, the more you learn and despite the idioacracy of Anton, there is more to learn that a lifetime worth of time makes available. There is always learning. The is NO FUCKING WAY you can learn what you need from systemd with a video. I'm old, and strangly enough, before systemd we learned to both read and write. Well you can't fucking read a binary log file and you are sure as hell going to have a tough time rewriting systemd (process 1). I don't want to spend the rest of my life chasing this peice of garbage. The problem with systemd is that has simplified NOTHING and it is even more complicated than the shell scripts. And there is nothing you can do to make it work. It is sitting there between you and your box, acting like a trafic cop, and you have to have the mind of a beaurocrat to even begin to uderstand what it is doing. fundmentally, at the end of the day, I screem too often at computers... DO IT BECAUSE I SAID SO... I don't need this thing between me and my hardware. Ruben -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org To contact the owner, e-mail: opensuse+owner@opensuse.org