Dominik George dixit: >systemd, in its nature as an init system, starts what you tell it to >start. There is nothing that can prevent it from starting openntpd if >you want that. If you through a service file at it, or even an LSB >init script, then systemd has no choice but to start it.
No, this is about something else. This is about… I think it’s called “services” and it is something other packages require, and I believe it has to do something with dbus. This is not just about running an NTP dæmon, but, AIUI, some APIs to manage and query it (just like hostnamed, timezoned, etc). Of course I can start OpenNTPD now (and cause e.g. xntpd’s start to fail, with that), but some software will complain then. I have *no* idea for what people will want to use this, but… I cannot cite my sources as I got most of this from a private IRC channel. But there was some commit message in a systemd- or related git repository hinting at this. I did not save the link. bye, //mirabilos -- “ah that reminds me, thanks for the stellar entertainment that you and certain other people provide on the Debian mailing lists │ sole reason I subscribed to them (I'm not using Debian anywhere) is the entertainment factor │ Debian does not strike me as a place for good humour, much less German admin-style humour” -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to debian-devel-requ...@lists.debian.org with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact listmas...@lists.debian.org Archive: https://lists.debian.org/pine.bsm.4.64l.1407041310230.17...@herc.mirbsd.org