On Wed, Oct 23, 2013 at 11:06:39PM +0200, John Paul Adrian Glaubitz wrote: > On 10/23/2013 10:30 PM, Christoph Anton Mitterer wrote:
> > I wouldn't have any issues with that, but at least right now systemd is > > for me not yet production ready (it seems to miss proper dm-crypt > > integration - or at least all those use cases where dm-crypt makes sense > > at all). > > Of course I can install the package but don't have to switch init= to > > it, nevertheless it seems that already this alone adds several things > > (udev rules, dbus stuff and some things in the maintainer scripts) that > > *will* get enabled. > And does this cause any problems actually? Does your system no longer > boot properly using sysvinit when systemd is installed? > I don't exactly understand the problem so far. The problem is the scope creep. It's perfectly fine for gnome-settings-daemon to depend on the dbus services provided by systemd; but there needs to be a very clear separation between the dbus services and the init system, and the systemd package should be maintained with this in mind. You should not get an init system installed when you install the dbus services. This is deliberate embrace-and-extend on the part of systemd upstream, and Debian should not tolerate it. The Ubuntu packages may provide a useful template for how this package should be divided - with systemd-services providing logind, hostnamed, timedated, localed, separate from the init system components. A clear separation will help avoid any accidental dependencies on systemd-as-init from the systemd services. > > So I guess the question is mainly,... what's the policy from Debian side > > now with such cases? > Well, Debian is aiming for full systemd integration with Jessie, so > there is that. No, please reread that mail from the release team. It is a *proposal* from the systemd maintainers to implement full systemd support. The release team have not said that they have endorsed this as a release goal (and frankly, I don't expect them to do so; it's not the release team's place to decide what Debian should use as its default init system, and to endorse such a release goal would presuppose such a decision). So "the systemd maintainers are aiming", not "Debian is aiming". -- Steve Langasek Give me a lever long enough and a Free OS Debian Developer to set it on, and I can move the world. Ubuntu Developer http://www.debian.org/ slanga...@ubuntu.com vor...@debian.org
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