On Tue, Aug 18, 2015 at 7:02 AM, Martin Pitt <martin.p...@ubuntu.com> wrote: > Tom H [2015-08-18 5:40 -0400]:
>> Unless Ubuntu decides "we're going to provide native systemd units for >> all packages that have sysvrc scripts in Ubuntu version X", these >> units'll be provided at whatever pace the maintainers of packages with >> sysvrc scripts choose to do so; and it's not a big deal. > > It's not a question of "decide", but to actually go ahead and do it. > It's quite obviously better to have native units as they are both > upstreamable (and thus improve inter-distro collaboration and > documentation), and allow you to actually use the powers of a modern > init system. I guess that Ubuntu doesn't function this way but what I meant by "decides" was Ubuntu "management" deciding that all packages must provide systemd units. > Over time this will happen, but I doubt that SysV init scripts will > entirely go away anytime soon. At least you need the support for > third-party packages, and LSB mandates them. I didn't mean that sysvrc scripts disappear. I meant that both be provided, at least at long as Debian allows sysvinit as an init, so that daemons be launched and managed via systemd units rather than by sysvrc scripts. I don't think that Fedora still provides sysvrc scripts for packages that have systemd units; I doubt that Arch does but I don't use it. Gentoo's openrc scripts don't have LSB headers. Slackware doesn't have sysvrc scripts. The LSB's pretty much irrelevant outside of Debian and its derivatives. What's a leader without followers? A man taking a walk... -- Ubuntu-devel-discuss mailing list Ubuntu-devel-discuss@lists.ubuntu.com Modify settings or unsubscribe at: https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-devel-discuss