If it continues like that, it will be easy to contract LFS and BLFS to
one book, with essentially thre applications doing everything: systemd
and, perhaps, glibc and linux-kernel.
Reproduced from [1]:
{{{
author David Herrmann <[email protected]> 2014-10-03 13:58:44 (GMT)
committer David Herrmann <[email protected]> 2014-10-03 14:07:14
(GMT)
commit ce7b9f50c3fadbad22feeb28e4429ad9bee02bcc (patch)
tree b5f12ae9987b4f0ad0170fe9d2675f9c78d97c0b
parent 48fed5c55b5183e6d44702dfdccd3b5325d8689c (diff)
console: add user console daemon
This adds a first draft of systemd-consoled. This is still missing a lot
of features and does some rather primitive rendering. However, it shows
the direction this code is going and serves as basis for further
testing. The systemd-consoled binary should be run as `systemd --user'
unit. It automatically picks up any session marked as
Desktop=SYSTEMD-CONSOLE. Therefore, you can use any login-manager you
want (ranging from /bin/login to gdm) to create sessions for
systemd-consoled. However, the sessions managers must be prepared to set
the Desktop= variable properly. The user-session is called
`systemd-console', only the daemon providing the terminal environment is
called `systemd-consoled' (mind the 'd'). So far, only a single terminal
session is provided on each opened user-session. However, we support
multiple user-sessions (even across multiple seats) just fine. In the
future, the workspace logic will get extended so you can have multiple
terminal sessions in a single user-session for easier access. Note that
this is still experimental! Instructions on how to run it will follow
shortly.
}}}
--
[]s,
Fernando
[1]
http://cgit.freedesktop.org/systemd/systemd/commit/?id=ce7b9f50c3fadbad22feeb28e4429ad9bee02bcc
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