On 08/08/2015 05:36 AM, Rainer Weikusat wrote:
to 'use of systemd', there are things which sound like they were to fear
more seriously, ie, the stated intention of at least one kernel
maintainer (Tejun Hejo, spelling probably wrong) that he wants to "break
userspace" in order to turn cgroups "into a private property of
systemd".

I really do not think that you have anything to seriously worry about.

Every FOSS programmer ever born has their particular pet projects, thinking that they know better than everyone else. The community as a whole has a vested interest in *not* breaking the Linux userspace for the sake of one person's vanity project. (You might argue that systemd does that. 90% of the Linux community does not think so.) A broken Linux userspace means that huge amounts of code would have to be changed, and you can bet with some certainty that it is not in the best interests of the wider majority to tolerate that kind of disruption.


I can't see how cgroups would become "a private property of systemd" without a serious kernel rewrite.

As for the rest, I can't imagine it being a huge problem. Cgroups are a Linux specific process feature, which actually has very little affect on userspace outside of some Linux specific utilities that use it, like systemd. Cgroups not part of the POSIX standard, so the vast majority of the FOSS software does not use the feature at all.



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