On Thu, 2012-04-26 at 09:57 +0200, Josselin Mouette wrote: > Le jeudi 26 avril 2012 à 09:47 +0200, Bernd Zeimetz a écrit : > > > Unless you have radically modified things from the way the kernel works > > > by default, a lot of things already happen on your servers when a usb > > > device is inserted (the kernel notices the device and loads a driver, > > > udev (if it's running and not modified) creates the relevant device > > > nodes, etc). > > > > And udev does this jus fine, I don't need systemd or whatever else on > > top of that. > > So you want to replace init scripts by udev scripts? This might work for > part of the required functionality, but so far it looks like vaporware.
Init is about the boot of the computer, right? Who is stupid enough to put in a usb stick _during_ the boot? We need to separate boot from adding/removing peripheral devices! - Either the usb is not there during the boot and when inserted can be detected, by whatever software. Or you could teach the kernel about it's presence, like adding an fstab entry. - Alternately, the usb stick is inserted before the boot, and either it does not necessarily have to be mounted, or you know it has to be mounted, ant that can be prepared for in advance, e.g. by adding an fstab entry. With this reasoning there is _no_ need for for an event driven boot system, a dependency-based one is OK. Additionally there is _no_ need to being able to add/remove peripheral devices without the admin/user being aware of that, and for servers nothing should happen as mentioned before. In summary, in practice, there is real need for this M$ "plug and play" more known as "plug and pray" or "plug and pay", -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to debian-devel-requ...@lists.debian.org with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact listmas...@lists.debian.org Archive: http://lists.debian.org/1335459955.3707.138.ca...@hp.my.own.domain