❦ 21 juillet 2013 23:48 CEST, Roger Leigh <rle...@codelibre.net> :
>> > Making the switch away from the entrenched sysvinit is visibly very >> > difficult, at least as a social matter, even in the environment we have. >> > systemd et al., by virtue of the integration which is apparently one of >> > their selling points and the "proprietary"[0] interfaces they seem to >> > use, look like they would create an environment where a similar switch >> > to "whatever comes next" would be even harder - at least partly as a >> > technical matter, rather than a social one. >> >> Hey guys, I know this “Linux” thing is better than Minix, but it brings >> a lot of new features that we will be growing accustomed to. If we ever >> want to switch to Hurd one day, this is going to be much more >> complicated. >> >> This has to be one of the most twisted and bad faith arguments I ever >> heard in a situation of change resistance. > > Not at all. If we're looking a bit further ahead than just the > immediate discussion, then this is an legitimate concern. We don't > want to paint ourselves into a corner we can't get out of. With > the features and interfaces systemd offers, asking the question of > how we can move to something else in the future is entirely > reasonable, since it's quite likely that the answer would be that > it would be difficult and painful once it became pervasive and > entrenched. We would be effectively "locked in". We are currently "locked in" with an old and ineffective init system. It would be better to be "locked in" by something more modern. -- Replace repetitive expressions by calls to a common function. - The Elements of Programming Style (Kernighan & Plauger)
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