Just ran across this interview from 2011:

https://raphaelhertzog.com/2011/12/13/people-behind-debian-ben-hutchings-member-of-the-kernel-team/

Tucked away at the end was this quote:

Raphael: What’s the biggest problem of Debian?

Ben: I think we try too hard to accommodate every possible option, without 
regard for the cost to developers and users in general. As an example, we now 
have sysvinit, file-rc, upstart and systemd all in testing. Daemon maintainers 
can’t rely on any advanced features of upstart or systemd because we refuse to 
choose between them. And the decision to support the FreeBSD kernel means that 
we cannot choose upstart or systemd as the only option. So all daemon 
maintainers will have to maintain those baroque init scripts for the indefinite 
future. We really should be able to decide as a distribution that when one 
option is technically good and popular then it can be made the only option. But 
no-one really has the authority to do that, so we muddle along with the 
pretence that all the options are equally valid and functional, while none of 
them is supported as well as they should be.

What is this about 'baroque init scripts' and wanting to have only ONE option?  
Rather prescient in light of where we are now . . .

Just sharing . . . 

golinux 
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