Re: [gentoo-user] Re: Is gnome becoming obligatory?

2017-12-15 Thread Wols Lists
On 15/12/17 01:16, Marc Joliet wrote:
> [ Just to be clear: autofs is a Linux kernel feature, systemd just exposes it 
> in an easy to use way.  That is, BTW, a theme with systemd. ]

Likewise, cgroups. I believe Lennart is regularly "blamed" for this, but
it's been in the kernel a looonngg time, long before systemd. Just not
with any easy way of using it.

Cheers,
Wol



Re: [gentoo-user] Re: Is gnome becoming obligatory?

2017-12-15 Thread Neil Bothwick
On Fri, 15 Dec 2017 07:38:01 +0100, J. Roeleveld wrote:

> > If you "rc-update del" a service, you wouldn't
> > prevent it from being started neither, just because OpenRC is still
> > able to pull it in as a dependency.  
> 
> True, except with OpenRC, all the config is located together. Not
> mostly in / usr/ somewhere with overrides in /etc/...
> I dislike all tools that split their config in this way.

Conversely, I prefer it. The package defaults should be set in /usr, /etc
is for customisation. xorg works the same way with settings
in /etc/overriding those it /usr. It saves cluttering up /etc with tons
of default settings.

However, with both openrc and systemd you don't need to trawl the
filesystems to find the settings, using the provided tools, rc-update and
systemctl in this case, is both preferred and simpler.

One of the benefits, IMO, of systemd, is that it brings a consistency to
operations. In many cases the systemd tools do the same as their
non-systemd equivalents, but they follow a consistent style guide. Of
course, this means that they may work differently to the way you are used
to and there is definitely a learning curve in switching to systemd. I
also didn't discover mask/unmask for a while, only finding it when I was
looking for something else in a man page. Running a mixture of systemd and
openrc boxes, I more often find myself doing thing wrong on the openrc
boxes these days and missing systemd features.


-- 
Neil Bothwick

Puritanism: The haunting fear that someone, somewhere may be happy.


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Re: [gentoo-user] Re: Is gnome becoming obligatory?

2017-12-14 Thread J. Roeleveld
On Friday, December 15, 2017 2:25:29 AM CET Marc Joliet wrote:
> Am Freitag, 15. Dezember 2017, 02:12:08 CET schrieb R0b0t1:
> > On Thu, Dec 14, 2017 at 6:35 PM, Peter Humphrey 
> 
> wrote:
> > > On Thursday, 14 December 2017 16:03:19 GMT Ian Zimmerman wrote:
> > >> I'll try not to feed this monster thread any longer, I promise.
> > > 
> > > Ah, but will you succeed?:)
> > 
> > List, in my weakness, I felt compelled to make the 77th post, as seven
> > is a holy number indeed.

7 doesn't have any holes, so it can't be holy...

> > Cheers,
> > 
> >  R0b0t1
> 
> Hah, and *right* before I sent my own monster mail, too!  So it seems I'm
> poor number 78... (and 79 now, too, I guess)

8 and 9 do have holes...
you made a holy number :)




Re: [gentoo-user] Re: Is gnome becoming obligatory?

2017-12-14 Thread J. Roeleveld
On Friday, December 15, 2017 4:05:41 AM CET Kai Krakow wrote:
> Am Thu, 14 Dec 2017 08:54:59 +0100 schrieb J. Roeleveld:
> >> Some historical correctnesses about Canek:
> >> 
> >> - He has been here for years - He has contributed here for years - He
> >> supports systemd and has offered more help and explanation about
> >> systemd to it's users on this list than any other single person, bar
> >> none - He has never, not once, slagged off SysV Init, OpenRC or any
> >> other init system, ot the creators or the users - He has never posted
> >> rude or inflamatory comments about anyone arguing against him - He has
> >> never resorted to ad-hominem and never posted any knee jerk opinions
> >> about any other poster wrt their stance on init systems
> > 
> > +1 I may not agree with Canek on all things:
> > - I do dislike systemd, especially on Centos where disabling services
> > doesn't always work past a reboot
> 
> Well, I think you're falling the pitfall expecting "disable" makes a unit
> unstartable. That is not the case. Disabling a unit only removes it from
> the list of units starting on your own intent. It can still be pulled it
> as a (required) dependency.

Makes sense

> If you really want it never being started, you need to mask the unit.
> It's then no longer visible to the dependency resolver as if it were not
> installed at all.

This is not listed anywhere easy to find in google.

> The verbs disable and enable are arguably a bit misleading, while the
> verbs mask and unmask are not really obvious. But if you think of it, it
> actually makes sense.

Actually, it doesn't. But lets not discuss naming conventions. A lot of tools 
have ones where I fail to see the logic.
It's a shame that option is not easily findable. And not knowing it exists, 
means checking man-pages and googling for them doesn't happen either.

> If you "rc-update del" a service, you wouldn't
> prevent it from being started neither, just because OpenRC is still able
> to pull it in as a dependency.

True, except with OpenRC, all the config is located together. Not mostly in /
usr/ somewhere with overrides in /etc/...
I dislike all tools that split their config in this way.

> So it's actually not an argument for why you'd dislike systemd. ;-)

The lack of easily findable documentation on how to stop a service from 
starting, even as a dependency, is a reason. (not singularly against systemd).
Systemd, however, has an alternative.

--
Joost



Re: [gentoo-user] Re: Is gnome becoming obligatory?

2017-12-14 Thread Marc Joliet
Am Freitag, 15. Dezember 2017, 02:12:08 CET schrieb R0b0t1:
> On Thu, Dec 14, 2017 at 6:35 PM, Peter Humphrey  
wrote:
> > On Thursday, 14 December 2017 16:03:19 GMT Ian Zimmerman wrote:
> >> I'll try not to feed this monster thread any longer, I promise.
> > 
> > Ah, but will you succeed?:)
> 
> List, in my weakness, I felt compelled to make the 77th post, as seven
> is a holy number indeed.
> 
> Cheers,
>  R0b0t1

Hah, and *right* before I sent my own monster mail, too!  So it seems I'm poor 
number 78... (and 79 now, too, I guess)

Greetings
-- 
Marc Joliet
--
"People who think they know everything really annoy those of us who know we
don't" - Bjarne Stroustrup


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Re: [gentoo-user] Re: Is gnome becoming obligatory?

2017-12-14 Thread Marc Joliet
Am Donnerstag, 14. Dezember 2017, 16:52:59 CET schrieb Ian Zimmerman:
> On 2017-12-14 11:57, Marc Joliet wrote:
> > I could list specific features of systemd that I like and make use of
> > (such as socket activation, autofs integration, user units, nspawn, or
> > the journal), but thinking about it, it's a "more than the sum of its
> > parts" kind of deal.  Managing a system with systemd is just overall
> > pleasant for me.
> 
> I am probably not the only one who would still dearly like such a
> detailed list, from someone I don't see as biased to start with.  I
> understand this is a drain on your time, so I'll understand if you
> decline.

I don't mind per se, but whether I'm inclined to do so depends on the attitude 
of who's asking.  If I'm asked politely the way you did then I don't mind at 
all, in fact it can be quite pleasant :) (and it also serves to refresh my 
memory).

Before I begin, to avoid making this sound all rainbows and glitter, I will 
mention one thing that annoys me about systemd:  regressions.  None of them 
have been horrible, and I think I was only ever hit by 2 or 3 over the course 
of by now several years, but they're still annoying.  The one I'm currently 
waiting on is the systemd-run bug when both cgroup V1 and V2 trees are mounted. 
 I could work around it (by deactivating cgroup V2 support or some such), but I 
don't miss systemd-run so much that I could be bothered to.  Regardless, I wish 
upstream would handle them better.

Also, this is just my perspective as a hobbyist (although I've used systemd in 
a professional context).  I could recommend some presentations that provide a 
different perspective (e.g., by a company that uses systemd in IP cameras, 
where the cgroups based resource management features of systemd came in very 
handy).  There's also a presentation by Klaus Knopper of Knoppix fame that is 
overall more negative, but still mostly fair -- though IMHO not completely -- 
and as I recall one of the better criticisms I've seen.  His perspective is 
that of somebody trying to provide a Linux OS for computers destined for poorer 
countries, where he has to deal with less capable hardware (i.e., no SSDs, 
booting from CD/DVD).

(Also also, sorry in advance for the wall of text, this kind of, uh, spun out 
of control.  Sorry also to Ian and Peter for continuing to feed the monster 
thread ;-) .)

Alright, so here's what I can think of now, starting off with what I listed 
above and then continuing with anything else I can remember.  This includes 
more or less verbose descriptions of what the features bring to the table, 
including specifically how they help *me*.

1.) Socket activation sounds like a detail, but it has several positive side 
effects.  It can make dependency specifications unnecessary, thus making unit 
files simpler, and it increases the number of services that can start in 
parallel.  It also enables on-demand services á la (x)inetd, only generalised 
for all system services (I use SSH this way by only enabling the socket unit).  
You can't use systemd without using this feature, something's bound to use it.

This is the main reason systemd can boot so fast (on flash storage, at least).  
That may not be important to some people, but it is to me (and embedded 
projects).

2.) Autofs integration via automount units allows dynamic mounting (and 
optionally unmounting) of file systems, which I use on my desktop to 
asynchronously mount my data dump (a 2x1TB btrfs RAID1).  To be honest, I 
mostly did this to speed up boot time (I think I mention timings in the Email 
thread I referenced), but it also makes boot-up finish independent of mount 
failures.  On my home server (an old Mac Mini) I use it for a USB drive for the 
same reasons (although boot time isn't so important there).

[ Just to be clear: autofs is a Linux kernel feature, systemd just exposes it 
in an easy to use way.  That is, BTW, a theme with systemd. ]

3.) Personally I find user units (systemd units that run as your user) super 
practical.  There is a system location for them, but you can place your own in 
your home directory under ~/.config/systemd/user/ and have them start when you 
log in.  If you configure your user session -- which is basically a systemd 
instance running as your user -- as "lingering", you can have persistent user 
services that run as long as your computer is on (strictly speaking, for as 
long as your user session is active).  For example, my desktop looks like this:

> % systemctl --user list-units -t service -t timer -a
>   UNIT  LOAD  ACTIVE   SUB DESCRIPTION
> 
>   ctags.service loadedinactive deadRegenerate ctags files 
> 
>   gpg-agent.service loadedactive   running Start gpg-agent (with 
> SSH support) 
>   mpd.service   loadedactive   running Music Player Daemon
>  

Re: [gentoo-user] Re: Is gnome becoming obligatory?

2017-12-14 Thread R0b0t1
On Thu, Dec 14, 2017 at 6:35 PM, Peter Humphrey  wrote:
> On Thursday, 14 December 2017 16:03:19 GMT Ian Zimmerman wrote:
>
>> I'll try not to feed this monster thread any longer, I promise.
>
> Ah, but will you succeed?:)
>

List, in my weakness, I felt compelled to make the 77th post, as seven
is a holy number indeed.

Cheers,
 R0b0t1



Re: [gentoo-user] Re: Is gnome becoming obligatory?

2017-12-14 Thread Peter Humphrey
On Thursday, 14 December 2017 16:03:19 GMT Ian Zimmerman wrote:

> I'll try not to feed this monster thread any longer, I promise.

Ah, but will you succeed?:)

-- 
Regards,
Peter.




Re: [gentoo-user] Re: Is gnome becoming obligatory?

2017-12-14 Thread Marc Joliet
Am Mittwoch, 13. Dezember 2017, 20:37:47 CET schrieb Alan Mackenzie:
> > > I've no idea how good systemd is.  It's not been through the normal
> > > process of choice and selection that other successful packages have.  It
> > > was forced on people.  But being forced to have a binary system log,
> > > being forced (so I have heard) to have an http server running, ,
> > > doesn't make it an attractive package for me.
> > 
> > *All* of this is "so I have heard".  What happened to researching stuff as
> > the better alternative to speaking out of your ass?
> 
> What have I done to deserve this abusive style of repartee?  I have never
> doled this out to anybody on this list in the past, and have no intention
> of doing so in the future.

You're right, you received the brunt of my built up aggression from this 
thread.  I'm sorry for that.

> Yes, there are a lot of "so I have heard"s in my posts.  Asking people on
> this list to confirm or refute things is a form of research, and a lot
> more efficient than many other ones.
> 
> There are several tens of thousands of packages in Gentoo, and I lack the
> time personally to investigate each one.  Asking people who already use
> them and post on this list is a normal thing to do.  Answering questions
> about packages one oneself uses is the flip side of that coin.

Except that you're not exactly asking questions, now are you?  You asked Neil 
one, but only after a longer to and fro.  If you *had* actually started out 
asking questions, as opposed to spouting hearsay and then even literally 
saying that you couldn't be bothered to research systemd yourself, my response 
would have been drastically different.  Remember that everybody is here on 
their own time, and not everybody wants to spend it responding to questions 
that can easily be answered by reading documentation.  I'm already wasting 
oodles of time writing this as is.

If you *really* are interested, there is a longer thread on gentoo-amd64 where 
I wrote about my experience switching to systemd [0] (keep in mind, however, 
that a bunch of it is outdated by now, such as how I manage networking and 
backups).  It could be interesting especially since it's mostly about actually 
solving problems.

I could list specific features of systemd that I like and make use of (such as 
socket activation, autofs integration, user units, nspawn, or the journal), 
but thinking about it, it's a "more than the sum of its parts" kind of deal.  
Managing a system with systemd is just overall pleasant for me.

[ And I never again have to deal with the state of a service being misreported 
by OpenRC because a daemons PID file has the wrong PID in it, or with stopping 
a service not actually stopping it, both of which I had experienced multiple 
times. ]

[0] https://archives.gentoo.org/gentoo-amd64/message/
58c67218a203b84318d52a39c3c67f73

Greetings
-- 
Marc Joliet
--
"People who think they know everything really annoy those of us who know we
don't" - Bjarne Stroustrup


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Re: [gentoo-user] Re: Is gnome becoming obligatory?

2017-12-13 Thread J. Roeleveld
On Wednesday, December 13, 2017 9:06:29 AM CET Alan McKinnon wrote:
> On 13/12/2017 01:23, allan gottlieb wrote:
> > On Mon, Dec 11 2017, Jorge Almeida wrote:
> >> On Sun, Dec 10, 2017 at 7:31 PM, Canek Peláez Valdés  
wrote:
> >>> Just my two cents. I will not answer any reply to my little contribution
> >>> to
> >>> this thread;
> >> 
> >> Good. I can't remember any intervention from you that I would miss.
> > 
> > That makes one of us.
> > 
> > As a gnome user I needed to use systemd when gnome-3 came about.  While
> > I have nothing useful to say pro or con about systemd, I strongly
> > believe Canek has contributed a number of helpful comments to this
> > group.
> 
> Yes, this.
> 
> Some historical correctnesses about Canek:
> 
> - He has been here for years
> - He has contributed here for years
> - He supports systemd and has offered more help and explanation about
> systemd to it's users on this list than any other single person, bar none
> - He has never, not once, slagged off SysV Init, OpenRC or any other
> init system, ot the creators or the users
> - He has never posted rude or inflamatory comments about anyone arguing
> against him
> - He has never resorted to ad-hominem and never posted any knee jerk
> opinions about any other poster wrt their stance on init systems

+1
I may not agree with Canek on all things:
- I do dislike systemd, especially on Centos where disabling services doesn't 
always work past a reboot
- Users who can't write code also have a right to be heard and their wishes 
should still be honestly considered

But the conversations have always been civil. And information from him has 
always been helpful. He is one of the few people on this list whose comments I 
read and who I do miss when there isn't something for a while.

> If we look at the reverse we see a very different picture, and it's
> right here in this very thread. To the poster who rudely commented about
> Canek being a professor and that doesn't make him right and that he is
> one voice, step back pal and take a very long hard look at what you
> said. Yes, it doesn't make him right. Also doesn't make him wrong. His
> posts and the content are what make him right or wrong. There truly are
> fan bois on this list, but Canek is not one of them. It's the
> systemd-haters and Poeterring-haters who are being fan bois, painting
> all detractors with the same brush.

Canek bases his "being a fan of systemd" on what he needs and wants from a 
computer. For him, systemd fits that requirement perfectly.

> Frankly, I'm amazed Canek is still here considering the amount of abuse
> he takes from this list. He must have thick skin or maybe dealing with
> detractors is a crucial part of academic training. I myself would have
> rage quitted a long time ago but he is still here.
> 
> A good healthy dose of manners like your Mama taught you is in short
> supply around here right now.

+1 (again)




Re: [gentoo-user] Re: Is gnome becoming obligatory?

2017-12-13 Thread Kai Peter

On 2017-12-13 20:37, Alan Mackenzie wrote:


What have I done to deserve this abusive style of repartee?  I have 
never

You did post your opinion which doesn't fit with others.


I use Gentoo, partly because here I have a deal of choice.

Isn't it better to say you have partly a choice? ;-)

--
Sent with eQmail-1.10



Re: [gentoo-user] Re: Is gnome becoming obligatory?

2017-12-13 Thread Wols Lists
On 13/12/17 15:17, Neil Bothwick wrote:
> On Wed, 13 Dec 2017 14:01:38 +, Wols Lists wrote:
> 
>>> Can't you change this with fstab settings. I see a similar behaviour
>>> when trying t mount NFS shares that aren't there, but it gives up
>>> trying after 90s and gets on with booting the computer.  
>>
>> I've tried ...
>>
>> Systemd and mounting anything other than local linux hard drives gives
>> me a migraine ...
>>
>> Yes I *should* be able to tell it to just forget about drives it can't
>> mount while booting. Yes I *should* be able to tell it to just forget
>> about drives it can't access while shutting down. Yes I *should* be able
>> to tell it to do what I want, but it seems that no matter what I tell
>> it, it randomly refuses to boot or shut down because of a hiccup with a
>> Windows or network mount :-(
> 
> Have you tried adding x-systemd.mount-timeout= and/or nofail to the
> options in fstab? See man systemd.mount.
> 
> 
Quite likely. And ditched thanks to the guaranteed hang on shutdown as a
result, I think.

Every "fix" causes a different problem elsewhere, ime :-(

Cheers,
Wol



Re: [gentoo-user] Re: Is gnome becoming obligatory?

2017-12-13 Thread Alan Mackenzie
Hello, Marc.

On Wed, Dec 13, 2017 at 12:34:03 +0100, Marc Joliet wrote:
> Am Sonntag, 10. Dezember 2017, 11:13:30 CET schrieb Alan Mackenzie:

> > On Sun, Dec 10, 2017 at 09:55:45 +, Wols Lists wrote:

[  ]

> > > Granted he's not necessarily the most politic of people, and has ruffled
> > > a lot of feathers, but I'd much rather a system he's cleaned up, than a
> > > system where everything hangs together on a knife-edge.

> > His motivation seems to be ego.  To force everybody to use his software.
> > He did this by, amongst other things, abusing the trust placed in him to
> > maintain udev.  Early on he abandoned support for udev for everybody but
> > users of his new init system, systemd, in an attempt (sadly successful)
> > to force "everybody" into using systemd.

> Of course, the previous maintainer of udev fully supported whatever changes 
> were made, so you're painting a false picture of a potential different 
> history.

Previous maintainers have little, if any, influence on the direction
taken by their successors.

> > I've no idea how good systemd is.  It's not been through the normal
> > process of choice and selection that other successful packages have.  It
> > was forced on people.  But being forced to have a binary system log,
> > being forced (so I have heard) to have an http server running, ,
> > doesn't make it an attractive package for me.

> *All* of this is "so I have heard".  What happened to researching stuff as 
> the 
> better alternative to speaking out of your ass?

What have I done to deserve this abusive style of repartee?  I have never
doled this out to anybody on this list in the past, and have no intention
of doing so in the future.

Yes, there are a lot of "so I have heard"s in my posts.  Asking people on
this list to confirm or refute things is a form of research, and a lot
more efficient than many other ones.

There are several tens of thousands of packages in Gentoo, and I lack the
time personally to investigate each one.  Asking people who already use
them and post on this list is a normal thing to do.  Answering questions
about packages one oneself uses is the flip side of that coin.

> Speaking for myself, I *switched to* systemd fully on my own, and definitely 
> do *not* regret it.

This is a fair enough thing to say, but it is lacking any technical
detail.  Most posts on this list praising systemd are similarly lacking
in such detail, leaving people like me depending on the vague "so I have
heard"s we pick up.

> I can't speak for all distros, but all of the ones I know of switched
> willingly, because for them (as for me), systemd was the better choice.

And it had nothing to do with the withdrawal of support for udev, an
essential component of PC GNU/Linux systems, for every init system but
systemd, did it?  Or is that what you mean by "the better choice"?

> You're not against choice, are you ;-) ?

Indeed not, which is why I've found the actions of the originator of
systemd so regrettable.  He attempted to remove the choice of init
system.  The maintainers of gnome did the same.  I regret these actions
and more.

I use Gentoo, partly because here I have a deal of choice.

My choices are not merely technical but also political.  GNU/Linux
originated for political reasons, laudable ones, including giving end
users choice.  systemd also originated for political reasons, less
laudable, including reducing users' choice.

> > > Cheers,
> > > Wol

> Greetings
> -- 
> Marc Joliet
> --
> "People who think they know everything really annoy those of us who know we
> don't" - Bjarne Stroustrup

-- 
Alan Mackenzie (Nuremberg, Germany).



Re: [gentoo-user] Re: Is gnome becoming obligatory?

2017-12-13 Thread Walter Dnes
On Tue, Dec 12, 2017 at 10:34:27AM +, Neil Bothwick wrote

> I have three gnome packages installed on this KDE box. One is the
> tiny package that started this thread, and is GNOME only in name,
> the other two are dependencies of XFCE, which I also have installed.
> 
> I see no GNOME takeover, beyond the fact that many distros are
> choosing GNOME as their default desktop.

  My big hate is the ever-growing dependancy list of gtk.  Yes I know
that it's *NOT* supposed to mean "Gnome Tool Kit", but it seems to be
just that.  I run ICEWM window manager, but also use gnumeric and
abiword which require gtk+.  Over the past few years I've seen various
new hard-coded dependancies crop up when doing...

emerge -pv --changed-use --deep --update @world

adwaita-icon-theme, gtk-engines-adwaita, atk, dbus, harfbuzz,
introspection, libepoxy, etc, etc, etc.  How long before pulseaudio and
systemd show up as hard-coded dependancies?

  I'm old enough to remember a time when people switched to linux
because it ran fast on older machines that couldn't run the latest
Windows.

-- 
Walter Dnes 
I don't run "desktop environments"; I run useful applications



Re: [gentoo-user] Re: Is gnome becoming obligatory?

2017-12-13 Thread Neil Bothwick
On Wed, 13 Dec 2017 14:01:38 +, Wols Lists wrote:

> > Can't you change this with fstab settings. I see a similar behaviour
> > when trying t mount NFS shares that aren't there, but it gives up
> > trying after 90s and gets on with booting the computer.  
> 
> I've tried ...
> 
> Systemd and mounting anything other than local linux hard drives gives
> me a migraine ...
> 
> Yes I *should* be able to tell it to just forget about drives it can't
> mount while booting. Yes I *should* be able to tell it to just forget
> about drives it can't access while shutting down. Yes I *should* be able
> to tell it to do what I want, but it seems that no matter what I tell
> it, it randomly refuses to boot or shut down because of a hiccup with a
> Windows or network mount :-(

Have you tried adding x-systemd.mount-timeout= and/or nofail to the
options in fstab? See man systemd.mount.


-- 
Neil Bothwick

If Microsoft made cars:
"The airbag system would ask "are you sure?" before deploying."


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Re: [gentoo-user] Re: Is gnome becoming obligatory?

2017-12-13 Thread Alon Bar-Lev
I use autofs and very happy.
I do not need udisks at all, while it is mandatory dependency of solid.
I remember old discussion in which kde developer did not understand
the concept of optional for this slot.



Re: [gentoo-user] Re: Is gnome becoming obligatory?

2017-12-13 Thread Dale
Marc Joliet wrote:
> Am Mittwoch, 13. Dezember 2017, 12:04:03 CET schrieb Neil Bothwick:
>> On Wed, 13 Dec 2017 10:06:29 +0200, Alan McKinnon wrote:
>>> Some historical correctnesses about Canek:
>>>
>>> - He has been here for years
>>> - He has contributed here for years
>>> - He supports systemd and has offered more help and explanation about
>>> systemd to it's users on this list than any other single person, bar
>>> none
>>> - He has never, not once, slagged off SysV Init, OpenRC or any other
>>> init system, ot the creators or the users
>>> - He has never posted rude or inflamatory comments about anyone arguing
>>> against him
>>> - He has never resorted to ad-hominem and never posted any knee jerk
>>> opinions about any other poster wrt their stance on init systems
>>>
>>> If we look at the reverse we see a very different picture, and it's
>>> right here in this very thread. To the poster who rudely commented about
>>> Canek being a professor and that doesn't make him right and that he is
>>> one voice, step back pal and take a very long hard look at what you
>>> said. Yes, it doesn't make him right. Also doesn't make him wrong. His
>>> posts and the content are what make him right or wrong. There truly are
>>> fan bois on this list, but Canek is not one of them. It's the
>>> systemd-haters and Poeterring-haters who are being fan bois, painting
>>> all detractors with the same brush.
>> +1
>>
>> It was Canek's rational explanations about systemd that made me
>> interested enough to try it, and I'm glad I did. He made good technical
>> arguments in favour of it whereas most of the arguments against it are
>> either based on Lennartphobia or false fact gained from other systemd
>> haters.
> +1 to both Alan and Neil.
>
>> I also see the position as somewhat different with Gentoo, because openrc
>> is so much better than the other "traditional" systems out there, in fact
>> it shares some of the benefits of systemd. As a result, I run a mixture
>> of both systems. I prefer systemd now, but not enough to go through the
>> hassle of switching over an already working system. That wouldn't be the
>> case if those other systems weren't running openrc.
> That echoes my own sentiment pretty well.  OpenRC is one reason I stayed with 
> Gentoo, because it seemed better to me than the way other distros did things 
> (well, better than Suse, at least, which was the other distro I tried way 
> back 
> then).
>
> However, now I default to systemd, because for me it's even better than 
> OpenRC.  Plus, I don't have so many systems that I couldn't migrate them all 
> :-) .
>


And yet Canek is the only person on this mailing list to EVER get on my
blacklist for his posts.  That was years ago.  To this day, I don't get
any of his messages or read anything quoted from him.  Even the troll
who had his own script, kept griping about Gentoo and its update process
and refused to listen to anyone didn't make it to the blacklist level. 
Eventually, some comrel member or something booted them off the list. 

I have to say, -1 for me.  He managed to join a extremely exclusive club
with me.  He sits on a blacklist that no one else ever managed to get on. 

Dale

:-)  :-) 





Re: [gentoo-user] Re: Is gnome becoming obligatory?

2017-12-13 Thread Wols Lists
On 13/12/17 00:02, Neil Bothwick wrote:
>> and Windows has this infuriating habit of
>> > ignoring my command to shutdown, instead suspending to disk. As my
>> > Windows partitions automount in linux, this causes the mount to fail,
>> > and systemd won't boot the system. So I spend/waste half an hour trying
>> > to force Windows to shut down properly!

> Can't you change this with fstab settings. I see a similar behaviour when
> trying t mount NFS shares that aren't there, but it gives up trying after
> 90s and gets on with booting the computer.

I've tried ...

Systemd and mounting anything other than local linux hard drives gives
me a migraine ...

Yes I *should* be able to tell it to just forget about drives it can't
mount while booting. Yes I *should* be able to tell it to just forget
about drives it can't access while shutting down. Yes I *should* be able
to tell it to do what I want, but it seems that no matter what I tell
it, it randomly refuses to boot or shut down because of a hiccup with a
Windows or network mount :-(

And worse, every fix for one problem simply causes a different problem!

Cheers,
Wol



Re: [gentoo-user] Re: Is gnome becoming obligatory?

2017-12-13 Thread Neil Bothwick
On Wed, 13 Dec 2017 12:34:03 +0100, Marc Joliet wrote:

> > I've no idea how good systemd is.  It's not been through the normal
> > process of choice and selection that other successful packages have.

What process was that? The one where distro maintainers decide what to
include in *their* distros? Isn't that how all packages, including
systemd, make it into a distro. Debian even had a public debate and vote
on it. You seem to be implying that systemd got into those distros by
some stealth process, maybe a trojan or even osmosis?

> > It was forced on people.

Nothing has been forced on anyone because no one is forced to accept the
distro maintainers chosen defaults.

> > But being forced to have a binary system
> > log, being forced (so I have heard) to have an http server
> > running, , doesn't make it an attractive package for me.  
> 
> *All* of this is "so I have heard".  What happened to researching stuff
> as the better alternative to speaking out of your ass?

The systemd debate is different in that instead of fanboys that ignore
the facts, the loudest arguers are a hate club that make up their own
"facts".

I'm amazed that all those developers at Debian, Red Hat, Arch and other
distros ignored all these facts when they are normally so technically
astute. Still, what to experienced developers know when compared to
mailing list and forum posters...


-- 
Neil Bothwick

Sir! Romulan warbird decloaki\xBB\xAE\xF5\xF7\xFC\xC1 NO CARRIER


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Re: [gentoo-user] Re: Is gnome becoming obligatory?

2017-12-13 Thread Marc Joliet
Am Mittwoch, 13. Dezember 2017, 12:04:03 CET schrieb Neil Bothwick:
> On Wed, 13 Dec 2017 10:06:29 +0200, Alan McKinnon wrote:
> > Some historical correctnesses about Canek:
> > 
> > - He has been here for years
> > - He has contributed here for years
> > - He supports systemd and has offered more help and explanation about
> > systemd to it's users on this list than any other single person, bar
> > none
> > - He has never, not once, slagged off SysV Init, OpenRC or any other
> > init system, ot the creators or the users
> > - He has never posted rude or inflamatory comments about anyone arguing
> > against him
> > - He has never resorted to ad-hominem and never posted any knee jerk
> > opinions about any other poster wrt their stance on init systems
> > 
> > If we look at the reverse we see a very different picture, and it's
> > right here in this very thread. To the poster who rudely commented about
> > Canek being a professor and that doesn't make him right and that he is
> > one voice, step back pal and take a very long hard look at what you
> > said. Yes, it doesn't make him right. Also doesn't make him wrong. His
> > posts and the content are what make him right or wrong. There truly are
> > fan bois on this list, but Canek is not one of them. It's the
> > systemd-haters and Poeterring-haters who are being fan bois, painting
> > all detractors with the same brush.
> 
> +1
> 
> It was Canek's rational explanations about systemd that made me
> interested enough to try it, and I'm glad I did. He made good technical
> arguments in favour of it whereas most of the arguments against it are
> either based on Lennartphobia or false fact gained from other systemd
> haters.

+1 to both Alan and Neil.

> I also see the position as somewhat different with Gentoo, because openrc
> is so much better than the other "traditional" systems out there, in fact
> it shares some of the benefits of systemd. As a result, I run a mixture
> of both systems. I prefer systemd now, but not enough to go through the
> hassle of switching over an already working system. That wouldn't be the
> case if those other systems weren't running openrc.

That echoes my own sentiment pretty well.  OpenRC is one reason I stayed with 
Gentoo, because it seemed better to me than the way other distros did things 
(well, better than Suse, at least, which was the other distro I tried way back 
then).

However, now I default to systemd, because for me it's even better than 
OpenRC.  Plus, I don't have so many systems that I couldn't migrate them all 
:-) .

-- 
Marc Joliet
--
"People who think they know everything really annoy those of us who know we
don't" - Bjarne Stroustrup


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Re: [gentoo-user] Re: Is gnome becoming obligatory?

2017-12-13 Thread Marc Joliet
Am Sonntag, 10. Dezember 2017, 11:13:30 CET schrieb Alan Mackenzie:
> Hello, Wols
> 
> On Sun, Dec 10, 2017 at 09:55:45 +, Wols Lists wrote:
[...]
> > Lennart doesn't want a system where a small failure in one place
> > cascades and brings down a load of stuff elsewhere.
> 
> Neither do I, and neither does anybody.  GNU/Linux is not like that, and
> never has been.

Except where it has, of course.  (Seriously, you can't completely avoid 
breakage when different, independent groups are responsible for different 
components of a complex, intertwined system.)

> It has traditionally been a massive pain to set up,
> though, something which has improved dramatically over the last ten or
> twenty years.

I agree with this, though.

> > Granted he's not necessarily the most politic of people, and has ruffled
> > a lot of feathers, but I'd much rather a system he's cleaned up, than a
> > system where everything hangs together on a knife-edge.
> 
> His motivation seems to be ego.  To force everybody to use his software.
> He did this by, amongst other things, abusing the trust placed in him to
> maintain udev.  Early on he abandoned support for udev for everybody but
> users of his new init system, systemd, in an attempt (sadly successful)
> to force "everybody" into using systemd.

Of course, the previous maintainer of udev fully supported whatever changes 
were made, so you're painting a false picture of a potential different 
history.

> I've no idea how good systemd is.  It's not been through the normal
> process of choice and selection that other successful packages have.  It
> was forced on people.  But being forced to have a binary system log,
> being forced (so I have heard) to have an http server running, ,
> doesn't make it an attractive package for me.

*All* of this is "so I have heard".  What happened to researching stuff as the 
better alternative to speaking out of your ass?

Speaking for myself, I *switched to* systemd fully on my own, and definitely 
do *not* regret it.  I can't speak for all distros, but all of the ones I know 
of switched willingly, because for them (as for me), systemd was the better 
choice.  You're not against choice, are you ;-) ?

> > Cheers,
> > Wol

Greetings
-- 
Marc Joliet
--
"People who think they know everything really annoy those of us who know we
don't" - Bjarne Stroustrup


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Re: [gentoo-user] Re: Is gnome becoming obligatory?

2017-12-13 Thread Neil Bothwick
On Wed, 13 Dec 2017 10:06:29 +0200, Alan McKinnon wrote:

> Some historical correctnesses about Canek:
> 
> - He has been here for years
> - He has contributed here for years
> - He supports systemd and has offered more help and explanation about
> systemd to it's users on this list than any other single person, bar
> none
> - He has never, not once, slagged off SysV Init, OpenRC or any other
> init system, ot the creators or the users
> - He has never posted rude or inflamatory comments about anyone arguing
> against him
> - He has never resorted to ad-hominem and never posted any knee jerk
> opinions about any other poster wrt their stance on init systems
> 
> If we look at the reverse we see a very different picture, and it's
> right here in this very thread. To the poster who rudely commented about
> Canek being a professor and that doesn't make him right and that he is
> one voice, step back pal and take a very long hard look at what you
> said. Yes, it doesn't make him right. Also doesn't make him wrong. His
> posts and the content are what make him right or wrong. There truly are
> fan bois on this list, but Canek is not one of them. It's the
> systemd-haters and Poeterring-haters who are being fan bois, painting
> all detractors with the same brush.

+1

It was Canek's rational explanations about systemd that made me
interested enough to try it, and I'm glad I did. He made good technical
arguments in favour of it whereas most of the arguments against it are
either based on Lennartphobia or false fact gained from other systemd
haters.

I also see the position as somewhat different with Gentoo, because openrc
is so much better than the other "traditional" systems out there, in fact
it shares some of the benefits of systemd. As a result, I run a mixture
of both systems. I prefer systemd now, but not enough to go through the
hassle of switching over an already working system. That wouldn't be the
case if those other systems weren't running openrc.


-- 
Neil Bothwick

Irritable? Who the bloody hell are you calling irritable?


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Re: [gentoo-user] Re: Is gnome becoming obligatory?

2017-12-13 Thread Neil Bothwick
On Wed, 13 Dec 2017 01:11:23 +, Peter Humphrey wrote:

> On Tuesday, 12 December 2017 10:34:27 GMT Neil Bothwick wrote:
> > On Mon, 11 Dec 2017 23:24:48 +, Peter Humphrey wrote:  
> > > > I more and more get the feeling that linux is standardising on the
> > > > Gnome desktop, which I really just DO NOT get on with.  
> > > 
> > > Nor I. it's second only to M$ in its arrogance.  
> > 
> > I have three gnome packages installed on this KDE box. One is the tiny
> > package that started this thread, and is GNOME only in name, the other
> > two are dependencies of XFCE, which I also have installed.
> > 
> > I see no GNOME takeover, beyond the fact that many distros are
> > choosing GNOME as their default desktop.  
> 
> I didn't suggest it's taking over the world, just that it deliberately
> hides all useful configuration data from the user, just to save the
> devs from having to explain themselves.We know what you need better
> than you do, so just be a good boy and take your medicine.
> 
> Just like M$.
> 
There I agree with you. With dconf they've even got a registry.


-- 
Neil Bothwick

OK Scotty, NOW!  Detonate and energize!  I mean...


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Re: [gentoo-user] Re: Is gnome becoming obligatory?

2017-12-13 Thread Alan McKinnon
On 13/12/2017 01:23, allan gottlieb wrote:
> On Mon, Dec 11 2017, Jorge Almeida wrote:
> 
>> On Sun, Dec 10, 2017 at 7:31 PM, Canek Peláez Valdés  
>> wrote:
>>>
>>> Just my two cents. I will not answer any reply to my little contribution to
>>> this thread;
>>
>> Good. I can't remember any intervention from you that I would miss.
> 
> That makes one of us.
> 
> As a gnome user I needed to use systemd when gnome-3 came about.  While
> I have nothing useful to say pro or con about systemd, I strongly
> believe Canek has contributed a number of helpful comments to this
> group.


Yes, this.

Some historical correctnesses about Canek:

- He has been here for years
- He has contributed here for years
- He supports systemd and has offered more help and explanation about
systemd to it's users on this list than any other single person, bar none
- He has never, not once, slagged off SysV Init, OpenRC or any other
init system, ot the creators or the users
- He has never posted rude or inflamatory comments about anyone arguing
against him
- He has never resorted to ad-hominem and never posted any knee jerk
opinions about any other poster wrt their stance on init systems

If we look at the reverse we see a very different picture, and it's
right here in this very thread. To the poster who rudely commented about
Canek being a professor and that doesn't make him right and that he is
one voice, step back pal and take a very long hard look at what you
said. Yes, it doesn't make him right. Also doesn't make him wrong. His
posts and the content are what make him right or wrong. There truly are
fan bois on this list, but Canek is not one of them. It's the
systemd-haters and Poeterring-haters who are being fan bois, painting
all detractors with the same brush.

Frankly, I'm amazed Canek is still here considering the amount of abuse
he takes from this list. He must have thick skin or maybe dealing with
detractors is a crucial part of academic training. I myself would have
rage quitted a long time ago but he is still here.

A good healthy dose of manners like your Mama taught you is in short
supply around here right now.


-- 
Alan McKinnon
alan.mckin...@gmail.com




Re: [gentoo-user] Re: Is gnome becoming obligatory?

2017-12-12 Thread Peter Humphrey
On Tuesday, 12 December 2017 10:34:27 GMT Neil Bothwick wrote:
> On Mon, 11 Dec 2017 23:24:48 +, Peter Humphrey wrote:
> > > I more and more get the feeling that linux is standardising on the
> > > Gnome desktop, which I really just DO NOT get on with.
> > 
> > Nor I. it's second only to M$ in its arrogance.
> 
> I have three gnome packages installed on this KDE box. One is the tiny
> package that started this thread, and is GNOME only in name, the other
> two are dependencies of XFCE, which I also have installed.
> 
> I see no GNOME takeover, beyond the fact that many distros are choosing
> GNOME as their default desktop.

I didn't suggest it's taking over the world, just that it deliberately hides 
all useful configuration data from the user, just to save the devs from 
having to explain themselves.We know what you need better than you do, so 
just be a good boy and take your medicine.

Just like M$.

-- 
Regards,
Peter.




Re: [gentoo-user] Re: Is gnome becoming obligatory?

2017-12-12 Thread Neil Bothwick
On Tue, 12 Dec 2017 20:11:47 +, Wols Lists wrote:

> The two big problems I really can lay at systemd's feet is that the boot
> occasionally fails and says "dumping you into plymouth console" but
> doesn't - this goes away with a reboot ... hey reboots aren't supposed
> to fix problems in linux!,

Isn't that the initramfs rather than systemd?

> and Windows has this infuriating habit of
> ignoring my command to shutdown, instead suspending to disk. As my
> Windows partitions automount in linux, this causes the mount to fail,
> and systemd won't boot the system. So I spend/waste half an hour trying
> to force Windows to shut down properly!

Can't you change this with fstab settings. I see a similar behaviour when
trying t mount NFS shares that aren't there, but it gives up trying after
90s and gets on with booting the computer.


-- 
Neil Bothwick

Sure, we just route the main sensor through Data's cat.


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Re: [gentoo-user] Re: Is gnome becoming obligatory?

2017-12-12 Thread allan gottlieb
On Mon, Dec 11 2017, Jorge Almeida wrote:

> On Sun, Dec 10, 2017 at 7:31 PM, Canek Peláez Valdés  wrote:
>>
>> Just my two cents. I will not answer any reply to my little contribution to
>> this thread;
>
> Good. I can't remember any intervention from you that I would miss.

That makes one of us.

As a gnome user I needed to use systemd when gnome-3 came about.  While
I have nothing useful to say pro or con about systemd, I strongly
believe Canek has contributed a number of helpful comments to this
group.

allan



Re: [gentoo-user] Re: Is gnome becoming obligatory?

2017-12-12 Thread Neil Bothwick
On Tue, 12 Dec 2017 18:55:15 +, Alan Mackenzie wrote:

> You seem to know systemd reasonably well - maybe you've got it
> installed and you're using it.  Please tell me whether my suspicion
> above (that systemd builds stuff into the system that is likely to be
> superfluous to a user, and possibly forces its use on its users) is well
> founded.

Of course it does, any collection of utilities is bound to include stuff
you don't need. This includes systemd as well as the likes of coreutils
and util-linux. The number of programs that you are forced to use after
installation is exactly zero, although most people that install systemd
do so because they want to use at least part of it, and are happy using
the parts they want. For example, I'm happy with systemd's network
management and time sync tools so I use them. I find systemd timers
unnecessarily complex for my needs so I stick with cron for that.


-- 
Neil Bothwick

Top Oxymorons Number 38: Government organization


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Re: [gentoo-user] Re: Is gnome becoming obligatory?

2017-12-12 Thread Wols Lists
On 12/12/17 18:55, Alan Mackenzie wrote:
> You seem to know systemd reasonably well - maybe you've got it
> installed and you're using it.  Please tell me whether my suspicion
> above (that systemd builds stuff into the system that is likely to be
> superfluous to a user, and possibly forces its use on its users) is well
> founded.

If you want to "check things out", it's a lot easier to check out an
*init system built on systemd* than one built on SysVInit. Dunno about
OpenRC.

Yes, systemd itself is a lot bigger than init itself. Yes, systemd plus
service files is smaller (MUCH smaller) than the equivalent init plus
scripts.

The other big "problem" that many people moan about is that systemd
takes over things like system time, system name, cron, etc etc etc. But
having dealt with a whole variety of linux and unix systems, it's nice
to know that systemd has standardised where the host name is stored.
It's nice to know that how to set system time is standard across
distros. Cron? Well the whole point of systemd is to start services as
required, and cron merely starts services as required where "as
required" is defined by time, so why not merge the two?

The big problem, as I see it, with systemd is that if the boot fails for
any reason it dumps you into a rescue shell. I prefer the old behaviour
of dumping you into a running system with broken services. But given the
choice I'd much rather have neither! :-)

On my SuSE (systemd) laptop, I have a bunch of problems, of which
systemd is minor. The network won't resume properly after suspend
(nothing to do with systemd afaict), the video driver is broken and I
suspect that is what drives system load over 6 (on a dual-core system)
so response time is measured in minutes. The screen itself stops working
at random. All that I suspect is down to a broken i915 or whatever it is
Intel driver (which has a bad rep in the kernel - a nightmare seeing as
it seems to be the default Intel laptop video setup :-( etc etc.

The two big problems I really can lay at systemd's feet is that the boot
occasionally fails and says "dumping you into plymouth console" but
doesn't - this goes away with a reboot ... hey reboots aren't supposed
to fix problems in linux!, and Windows has this infuriating habit of
ignoring my command to shutdown, instead suspending to disk. As my
Windows partitions automount in linux, this causes the mount to fail,
and systemd won't boot the system. So I spend/waste half an hour trying
to force Windows to shut down properly!

Cheers,
Wol



Re: [gentoo-user] Re: Is gnome becoming obligatory?

2017-12-12 Thread Alan Mackenzie
Hello.

On Tue, Dec 12, 2017 at 01:01:29 -0600, J García wrote:
> 2017-12-11 15:03 GMT-06:00 Alan Mackenzie :
> > OK.  But it's still there taking up RAM, and (more importantly) makes a
> > systemd system a broader target for attacks.  Whether a system has an
> > http server (or, for that matter, an SSH server), for whatever purpose,
> > should be for the system administrator to decide.  I suspect this isn't
> > the case for systemd's http server.

>  Too much suspicion, too much assumtions,

One doesn't get by in contemporary life without them.  My suspicion,
founded on the content of a normally reliable mailing list (this one) is
that systemd would (i) build into my system much that I don't want to
use; (ii) would force me into using some of that stuff.  openrc doesn't
have these attributes.

> $ equery  -N u systemd  | grep http
>  - - http   : Enable embedded HTTP server in journald

> $ grep -C 2 http $PORTDIR/sys-apps/systemd/systemd-235-r1.ebuild

> 42:http? (
> 43:>=net-libs/libmicrohttpd-0.9.33:0=
> 44-ssl? ( >=net-libs/gnutls-3.1.4:0= )
> 45-)


> 42:http? (
> 43:>=net-libs/libmicrohttpd-0.9.33:0=
> 44-ssl? ( >=net-libs/gnutls-3.1.4:0= )
> 45-)

> I prefer certainty, don't you?

If certainty were free of costs, or even cheap, then yes.

> It is actually more useful to check the software, than lose your time
> with so many words on this list.

No, it would take far too much time and effort to check out the
software, particularly for something I have no use for.

You seem to know systemd reasonably well - maybe you've got it
installed and you're using it.  Please tell me whether my suspicion
above (that systemd builds stuff into the system that is likely to be
superfluous to a user, and possibly forces its use on its users) is well
founded.

Thanks!

-- 
Alan Mackenzie (Nuremberg, Germany).



Re: [gentoo-user] Re: Is gnome becoming obligatory?

2017-12-12 Thread Arve Barsnes
On 12 December 2017 at 12:11, Wols Lists  wrote:

> Then there's ASCII - is that parity off? parity on? parity set?
> Then there's lines separated by  - or is that ? or is that  with optional trailing NULL>?
> And that's just the versions I know of and have met ...
>
> There's no such thing as "plain text", as anybody using samba or ftp
> between different types of system will testify to their cost with
> trashed and broken files that screwed up in transfer ... :-)
>
> Difference being that almost every single editor you could think up
transparently reads all of those without you having to think about it.


Re: [gentoo-user] Re: Is gnome becoming obligatory?

2017-12-12 Thread Wols Lists
On 11/12/17 22:29, Neil Bothwick wrote:
>> I don't want a binary logging daemon either: that means having to learn
>> > a special purpose utility to be able to read its logs, and, in general,
>> > not being able to read that log from a remote machine.

> "journalctl" is just the same as "less /var/log/messages" so here's not
> much to learn unless you want to use the search features. Reading the log
> from a remote machine is easy, using either SSH or HTTP, whichever you
> prefer. My one complaint about the systemd journal is that there is not,
> AFAIK, a standalone reader. If I want to boot from a live CD, I can only
> read the logs if it is a systemd live CD, or I chroot into the original
> system. Unless someone knows different...

If the log isn't binary, what is it? Plain text? Well, I certainly can't
read it just by looking at the disk surface!

Yes, I know I'm being facetious, but there's no such thing as plain text
on a computer. And I'm well aware of five or six or more binary text
encodings - from the folowing list I think about the only one I haven't
used is EBCDIC ...

Okay, I said EBCDIC.
Then there's ASCII - is that parity off? parity on? parity set?
Then there's lines separated by  - or is that ? or is that ?
And that's just the versions I know of and have met ...

There's no such thing as "plain text", as anybody using samba or ftp
between different types of system will testify to their cost with
trashed and broken files that screwed up in transfer ... :-)

Cheers,
Wol



Re: [gentoo-user] Re: Is gnome becoming obligatory?

2017-12-12 Thread Tom H
On Mon, Dec 11, 2017 at 5:29 PM, Neil Bothwick  wrote:
>
> "journalctl" is just the same as "less /var/log/messages" so here's
> not much to learn unless you want to use the search features. Reading
> the log from a remote machine is easy, using either SSH or HTTP,
> whichever you prefer. My one complaint about the systemd journal is
> that there is not, AFAIK, a standalone reader. If I want to boot from
> a live CD, I can only read the logs if it is a systemd live CD, or I
> chroot into the original system. Unless someone knows different...

In an emergency, "strings system.journal | grep MESSAGE= | less" is useful.

It's too bad that there isn't a standalone journal reader but the
systemd developers live in a systemd world and assume that others live
in the same world. Anyway, a live CD of a systemd-based distribution's
always easy to retrieve and use.



Re: [gentoo-user] Re: Is gnome becoming obligatory?

2017-12-12 Thread Neil Bothwick
On Mon, 11 Dec 2017 23:24:48 +, Peter Humphrey wrote:

> > I more and more get the feeling that linux is standardising on the
> > Gnome desktop, which I really just DO NOT get on with.  
> 
> Nor I. it's second only to M$ in its arrogance.

I have three gnome packages installed on this KDE box. One is the tiny
package that started this thread, and is GNOME only in name, the other
two are dependencies of XFCE, which I also have installed.

I see no GNOME takeover, beyond the fact that many distros are choosing
GNOME as their default desktop.


-- 
Neil Bothwick

If at first you don't suceed, try the switch marked "Power"


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Re: [gentoo-user] Re: Is gnome becoming obligatory?

2017-12-12 Thread Neil Bothwick
On Tue, 12 Dec 2017 01:01:29 -0600, J García wrote:

> It is actually more useful to check the software, than lose your time
> with so many words on this list.

Spoilsport!


-- 
Neil Bothwick

I cna ytpe 300 wrods pre mniuet!!!


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Re: [gentoo-user] Re: Is gnome becoming obligatory?

2017-12-11 Thread J García
2017-12-11 15:03 GMT-06:00 Alan Mackenzie :
> OK.  But it's still there taking up RAM, and (more importantly) makes a
> systemd system a broader target for attacks.  Whether a system has an
> http server (or, for that matter, an SSH server), for whatever purpose,
> should be for the system administrator to decide.  I suspect this isn't
> the case for systemd's http server.
>
 Too much suspicion, too much assumtions,
$ equery  -N u systemd  | grep http
 - - http   : Enable embedded HTTP server in journald

$ grep -C 2 http $PORTDIR/sys-apps/systemd/systemd-235-r1.ebuild

42:http? (
43:>=net-libs/libmicrohttpd-0.9.33:0=
44-ssl? ( >=net-libs/gnutls-3.1.4:0= )
45-)


42:http? (
43:>=net-libs/libmicrohttpd-0.9.33:0=
44-ssl? ( >=net-libs/gnutls-3.1.4:0= )
45-)

I prefer certainty, don't you?

It is actually more useful to check the software, than lose your time
with so many words on this list.



Re: [gentoo-user] Re: Is gnome becoming obligatory?

2017-12-11 Thread mad.scientist.at.large
It's a problem because it's a manufactured dependency rather than one that is 
necessary or would usually happen, and again systemd gives you no choice, no 
control.  It was done to inflate a fragile ego in some one who should perhaps 
feel some shame over some of his responses to legitimate bugs, security and 
otherwise.  

seriously, the people making decisions on gnome have fallen into the "one best 
way trap", much like coca cola did with new coke and discontinuing one of the 
most successful products world wide.   why, because "most"  people preferred 
new coke over the traditional flavor.  what they didn't consider was that many 
people preferred the classic coke, particularly at restaurants, in fact it cost 
coca cola many of their' restaurant chain clients who switched to pepsi.  

That's what happens when you assume that one size fits all, that one solution 
is optimal for all situations, and again there's a tremendous level of 
arrogance and disrespect for the community and the paying customer base in 
particular.  It's a form of the big company problem, small companies that act 
like large companies never become large companies, the mega corporations would 
not exist if they weren't doing it right at one time, but they tend  to be lazy 
and sloppy, political etc. as they become larger.   If i wanted that I'd use 
winblows.

And why oh why would you want software on your' system that you don't use?  
again one obvious example is embedded systems where all resources tend to be 
scarce.  And just having code installed creates vulnerabilities and increases 
the chances that part of the system will conflict with another part.

The input validation issue is a great example of careless coding in a security 
critical piece of code, specifically that anyone with access of any kind can 
DOS with a one liner, though it sometimes has to have a loop because this bug 
is not deterministic, i.e. there's a great deal of randomness to it (i assume 
and hope this has been fixed, properly).

Dependency based init systems may indeed be the way to go, but the way systemd 
is doing things is like  a catalog of bad programing practices and bad project 
administration.  Add to this the way systemd's involvement in everything is 
increasing tremendously the number of bugs in the code.  It is well understood 
that complexity decreases reliability.  Beause of this, during peace time, 
approximately one third of our best jet fighters have a broken system waiting 
to be repaired, not always a critical system, but considering the importance of 
reliability of jet fighters, and the tremendous money spent maintaining them 
it's very impressive to know that 2/3 is the best you can count on, under easy 
conditions.

Proclaiming the emperors new clothes are fantastically beautiful only proves 
one to be a fool.

"It just doesn't workk" (tm).  "bail on the bloatware"(tm).  Any one can repeat 
silly slogans that have no real bearing on anything.  Oh, and of course there's 
the either or thinking being implied, and the assumption that there aren't 
other solutions which may well be far more optimal for the average user.  like 
all sciences and arts computer hardware and software ideals are in flux all the 
time with genuinely ingenious ideas popping up everywhere that completely 
obsolete other methods in some or all cases.

mad.scientist.at.large (a good madscientist)
--


11. Dec 2017 12:20 by antli...@youngman.org.uk:


> On 10/12/17 23:08, Walter Dnes wrote:
>>> Oddly enough, although the details are different, that passage I've
>>> quoted pretty accurately describes how I feel about Gnome ...:-)
>>I can't find it right now on Google, but I vaguely remember that
>> Lennart asked the Gnome people to make systemd a hard dependancy.  Not
>> much later logind, which is required by Gnome, picks up systemd as a
>> hard dependancy.
>
> Imho that's no problem. If a higher level has a hard dependency on a lower 
> level, that's no surprise. And why should I care if someone else's desktop 
> pulls in any particular low-level plumbing. :-)
>
> BUT! If my choice of low-level plumbing (systemd) pulls in a desktop I don't 
> want that is a BIG PROBLEM. If I'm running headless, I don't even WANT a 
> desktop !!! I more and more get the feeling that linux is standardising on 
> the Gnome desktop, which I really just DO NOT get on with.
>
> Cheers,
> Wol

Re: [gentoo-user] Re: Is gnome becoming obligatory?

2017-12-11 Thread Peter Humphrey
On Monday, 11 December 2017 19:20:24 GMT Wol's lists wrote:

> I more and more get the feeling that linux is standardising on the Gnome
> desktop, which I really just DO NOT get on with.

Nor I. it's second only to M$ in its arrogance.

-- 
Regards,
Peter.




Re: [gentoo-user] Re: Is gnome becoming obligatory?

2017-12-11 Thread Neil Bothwick
On Mon, 11 Dec 2017 21:03:21 +, Alan Mackenzie wrote:

> OK.  But it's still there taking up RAM, and (more importantly) makes a
> systemd system a broader target for attacks.  Whether a system has an
> http server (or, for that matter, an SSH server), for whatever purpose,
> should be for the system administrator to decide.  I suspect this isn't
> the case for systemd's http server.

You're guessing again. The HTTP server doesn't run by default (very
little on systemd does). On Gentoo, it's not even built by default, but
don't let a brief look at the USE flags in eix get in the way of a good
argument!

> In any case, I don't want an http server on my system: I have no http to
> serve.

Then don't install one, I didn't.

> I installed sshd as one of the first things on my new system, to
> facilitate the transfer of files to it (and, probably, reading logs from
> it remotely).

The thing with using SSH to read logs is that it presents a much larger
attack vector when you only want to allow a user to read remote logs.

> I don't want a binary logging daemon either: that means having to learn
> a special purpose utility to be able to read its logs, and, in general,
> not being able to read that log from a remote machine.

"journalctl" is just the same as "less /var/log/messages" so here's not
much to learn unless you want to use the search features. Reading the log
from a remote machine is easy, using either SSH or HTTP, whichever you
prefer. My one complaint about the systemd journal is that there is not,
AFAIK, a standalone reader. If I want to boot from a live CD, I can only
read the logs if it is a systemd live CD, or I chroot into the original
system. Unless someone knows different...


-- 
Neil Bothwick

OPERATOR ERROR: Nyah, Nyah, Nyah, Nyah, Nyah!


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Re: [gentoo-user] Re: Is gnome becoming obligatory?

2017-12-11 Thread Tom H
On Mon, Dec 11, 2017 at 4:03 PM, Alan Mackenzie  wrote:
> On Mon, Dec 11, 2017 at 18:56:15 +, Neil Bothwick wrote:


>> This may come as a surprise to some, but some things you hear on
>> t'internet are not true...
>>
>> For example, the http server is there to allow access to logs from
>> another machine without needing to grant SSH access. It is not enabled by
>> default.
>
> OK. But it's still there taking up RAM, and (more importantly) makes a
> systemd system a broader target for attacks. Whether a system has an
> http server (or, for that matter, an SSH server), for whatever purpose,
> should be for the system administrator to decide. I suspect this isn't
> the case for systemd's http server.
>
> In any case, I don't want an http server on my system: I have no http to
> serve. I installed sshd as one of the first things on my new system, to
> facilitate the transfer of files to it (and, probably, reading logs from
> it remotely).

I don't use systemd on Gentoo but I assume that there's a USE flag for
the http server, because, in binary distributions, this http server's
in a standalone package - "systemd-journal-remote" on Ubuntu and
"systemd-journal-gateway" on RHEL and clones.


> I don't want a binary logging daemon either: that means having to learn
> a special purpose utility to be able to read its logs, and, in general,
> not being able to read that log from a remote machine.

You can set "Storage=none" and "ForwardToSyslog=yes" in
"/etc/systemd/journald.conf", install and enable rsyslog and you won't
have binary logs when running systemd.



Re: [gentoo-user] Re: Is gnome becoming obligatory?

2017-12-11 Thread Alan Mackenzie
Hello, Neil.

On Mon, Dec 11, 2017 at 18:56:15 +, Neil Bothwick wrote:
> On Sun, 10 Dec 2017 10:13:30 +, Alan Mackenzie wrote:

> > I've no idea how good systemd is.  It's not been through the normal
> > process of choice and selection that other successful packages have.  It
> > was forced on people.  But being forced to have a binary system log,
> > being forced (so I have heard) to have an http server running, ,

> This may come as a surprise to some, but some things you hear on
> t'internet are not true...

:-)

> For example, the http server is there to allow access to logs from
> another machine without needing to grant SSH access. It is not enabled by
> default.

OK.  But it's still there taking up RAM, and (more importantly) makes a
systemd system a broader target for attacks.  Whether a system has an
http server (or, for that matter, an SSH server), for whatever purpose,
should be for the system administrator to decide.  I suspect this isn't
the case for systemd's http server.

In any case, I don't want an http server on my system: I have no http to
serve.  I installed sshd as one of the first things on my new system, to
facilitate the transfer of files to it (and, probably, reading logs from
it remotely).

I don't want a binary logging daemon either: that means having to learn
a special purpose utility to be able to read its logs, and, in general,
not being able to read that log from a remote machine.

There are likely other inflexibilities about systemd that I don't want
either.  That's one reason why I'm sticking with openrc.  The politics
of it is another.

> -- 
> Neil Bothwick

-- 
Alan Mackenzie (Nuremberg, Germany).



Re: [gentoo-user] Re: Is gnome becoming obligatory?

2017-12-11 Thread Wol's lists

On 10/12/17 23:08, Walter Dnes wrote:

Oddly enough, although the details are different, that passage I've
quoted pretty accurately describes how I feel about Gnome ...:-)



   I can't find it right now on Google, but I vaguely remember that
Lennart asked the Gnome people to make systemd a hard dependancy.  Not
much later logind, which is required by Gnome, picks up systemd as a
hard dependancy.


Imho that's no problem. If a higher level has a hard dependency on a 
lower level, that's no surprise. And why should I care if someone else's 
desktop pulls in any particular low-level plumbing. :-)


BUT! If my choice of low-level plumbing (systemd) pulls in a desktop I 
don't want that is a BIG PROBLEM. If I'm running headless, I don't even 
WANT a desktop !!! I more and more get the feeling that linux is 
standardising on the Gnome desktop, which I really just DO NOT get on with.


Cheers,
Wol



Re: [gentoo-user] Re: Is gnome becoming obligatory?

2017-12-11 Thread Neil Bothwick
On Sun, 10 Dec 2017 10:13:30 +, Alan Mackenzie wrote:

> I've no idea how good systemd is.  It's not been through the normal
> process of choice and selection that other successful packages have.  It
> was forced on people.  But being forced to have a binary system log,
> being forced (so I have heard) to have an http server running, ,

This may come as a surprise to some, but some things you hear on
t'internet are not true...

For example, the http server is there to allow access to logs from
another machine without needing to grant SSH access. It is not enabled by
default.


-- 
Neil Bothwick

Stop tagline theft! Copyright your tagline (c)


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Re: [gentoo-user] Re: Is gnome becoming obligatory?

2017-12-11 Thread Tom H
On Sun, Dec 10, 2017 at 6:08 PM, Walter Dnes  wrote:
> On Sun, Dec 10, 2017 at 09:02:24PM +, Wols Lists wrote
>> On 10/12/17 10:13, Alan Mackenzie wrote:
>>>
>>> I've no idea how good systemd is. It's not been through the normal
>>> process of choice and selection that other successful packages have.
>>> It was forced on people. But being forced to have a binary system log,
>>> being forced (so I have heard) to have an http server running, ,
>>> doesn't make it an attractive package for me.
>>
>> Oddly enough, although the details are different, that passage I've
>> quoted pretty accurately describes how I feel about Gnome ... :-)
>
> I can't find it right now on Google, but I vaguely remember that
> Lennart asked the Gnome people to make systemd a hard dependancy. Not
> much later logind, which is required by Gnome, picks up systemd as a
> hard dependancy.

It was in 2011. The rationale was to use hostnamectl and localectl via
the gnome gui apps that set the hostname and locale and to replace
consolekit with logind for gdm and gnome-session. (Ubuntu showed with
upstart and systemd-shim that you could do all three with a different
init system.)



Re: [gentoo-user] Re: Is gnome becoming obligatory?

2017-12-11 Thread mad.scientist.at.large
Apologies, systemd is in centos/RHEL starting with V7.  I just checked, 
somewhere in the last few months i misinterpreted something drastically, i was 
sure systemd was gone, sadly it's not.  Guess i'll be installing etc. today, 
Centos 6.9 can't run the newest firefox due to a dependency that can't be 
satisfied in V6.9.  I know i had 7.4 installed and had problems, somehow i 
missed the systemd incorporation.  I guess init systems is a good place to 
start some deeper learning.  Guess i made this years mistake ;)  .

mad.scientist.at.large (a good madscientist)
--


11. Dec 2017 07:04 by mad.scientist.at.la...@tutanota.com:


> detail, the machine with centos is running 6.9, systemd was in V7+ i'll 
> have to check that.  systemd was i believe in the later versions of V6.  I 
> will check, it's been a hell of a year with many frustrations and my memory 
> of V7 might be wrong, i'll be installing the latest centos later today so 
> i'll check (i'll check before i install if possible).  I do remember this 
> change, unless the stress had me severely confused, which might have 
> happened, it was bad enough that i had a massive heart attack and didn't even 
> know that was the problem, it's something of a miracle that i'm still here 
> (badly blocked arteries, and apparently i tried to get off the table!).  
> Thankfully my heart has recovered completely, i'm a tough old bird.
>
> mad.scientist.at.large (a good madscientist)
> --
>
>
> 11. Dec 2017 06:48 by > mad.scientist.at.la...@tutanota.com> :
>
>
>> I've been using centos on one machine and checked.  When it was there it 
>> showed up in the process manager.  just checked system monitor ,it's using 
>> /sbin/init, manual for init on that machine says "upstart".  man entry also 
>> says "init is event-based init daemon"..."this is different to dependency 
>> based init daemons",  systemd is of course dependency based, unless i'm 
>> terribly confused, in which case it's time for gentoo or debian on all my 
>> boxes. (yes, i use desktops almost exclusively).  
>>
>> i like big screens (multiple), proper keyboards, and a mouse or trackball.)  
>> I have a smart phone, too tiny screen, too tiny keyboard, and in this case 
>> somewhat damaged code.  Besides, it's hard to put a 3TB drive in a phone, 
>> currently.  Now when i get a brain jack one day and can run coprocessors 
>> etc. maybe  (not one of the first!) .  Other than desktops i have a couple 
>> lap tops, great when you need portable and exercise .
>>
>> mad.scientist.at.large (a good madscientist)
>> --
>>
>>
>> 11. Dec 2017 06:30 by >> bradf...@fstab.me>> :
>>
>>
>>> On Mon, 11 Dec 2017, at 13:22, >>> mad.scientist.at.la...@tutanota.com>>>  
>>> wrote:
>>>
 interestingly, RH (and Centos) have both dumped systemd and gone to 
 another system (I don't remember which one).  In fact they've done so 
 retroactively on earlier versions.  Of course the continuing take over of 
 linux by commercial interest is distorting development goals (time spent 
 trying to destandardize/create new standards, make it harder to install 
 and maintain, and new tools they don't have to give away).  

>>>
>>> Have you got a source on that? I haven't read any news about RH switching 
>>> to yet another init system.
>>>
>>> I think they're fairly well wedded to Systemd, for better or for worse.
>>> --
>>> Richard
>>>
>>>

Re: [gentoo-user] Re: Is gnome becoming obligatory?

2017-12-11 Thread mad.scientist.at.large
detail, the machine with centos is running 6.9, systemd was in V7+ i'll have to 
check that.  systemd was i believe in the later versions of V6.  I will check, 
it's been a hell of a year with many frustrations and my memory of V7 might be 
wrong, i'll be installing the latest centos later today so i'll check (i'll 
check before i install if possible).  I do remember this change, unless the 
stress had me severely confused, which might have happened, it was bad enough 
that i had a massive heart attack and didn't even know that was the problem, 
it's something of a miracle that i'm still here (badly blocked arteries, and 
apparently i tried to get off the table!).  Thankfully my heart has recovered 
completely, i'm a tough old bird.

mad.scientist.at.large (a good madscientist)
--


11. Dec 2017 06:48 by mad.scientist.at.la...@tutanota.com:


> I've been using centos on one machine and checked.  When it was there it 
> showed up in the process manager.  just checked system monitor ,it's using 
> /sbin/init, manual for init on that machine says "upstart".  man entry also 
> says "init is event-based init daemon"..."this is different to dependency 
> based init daemons",  systemd is of course dependency based, unless i'm 
> terribly confused, in which case it's time for gentoo or debian on all my 
> boxes. (yes, i use desktops almost exclusively).  
>
> i like big screens (multiple), proper keyboards, and a mouse or trackball.)  
> I have a smart phone, too tiny screen, too tiny keyboard, and in this case 
> somewhat damaged code.  Besides, it's hard to put a 3TB drive in a phone, 
> currently.  Now when i get a brain jack one day and can run coprocessors etc. 
> maybe  (not one of the first!) .  Other than desktops i have a couple lap 
> tops, great when you need portable and exercise .
>
> mad.scientist.at.large (a good madscientist)
> --
>
>
> 11. Dec 2017 06:30 by > bradf...@fstab.me> :
>
>
>> On Mon, 11 Dec 2017, at 13:22, >> mad.scientist.at.la...@tutanota.com>>  
>> wrote:
>>
>>> interestingly, RH (and Centos) have both dumped systemd and gone to another 
>>> system (I don't remember which one).  In fact they've done so retroactively 
>>> on earlier versions.  Of course the continuing take over of linux by 
>>> commercial interest is distorting development goals (time spent trying to 
>>> destandardize/create new standards, make it harder to install and maintain, 
>>> and new tools they don't have to give away).  
>>>
>>
>> Have you got a source on that? I haven't read any news about RH switching to 
>> yet another init system.
>>
>> I think they're fairly well wedded to Systemd, for better or for worse.
>> --
>> Richard
>>
>>

Re: [gentoo-user] Re: Is gnome becoming obligatory?

2017-12-11 Thread mad.scientist.at.large
I've been using centos on one machine and checked.  When it was there it showed 
up in the process manager.  just checked system monitor ,it's using /sbin/init, 
manual for init on that machine says "upstart".  man entry also says "init is 
event-based init daemon"..."this is different to dependency based init 
daemons",  systemd is of course dependency based, unless i'm terribly confused, 
in which case it's time for gentoo or debian on all my boxes. (yes, i use 
desktops almost exclusively).  

i like big screens (multiple), proper keyboards, and a mouse or trackball.)  I 
have a smart phone, too tiny screen, too tiny keyboard, and in this case 
somewhat damaged code.  Besides, it's hard to put a 3TB drive in a phone, 
currently.  Now when i get a brain jack one day and can run coprocessors etc. 
maybe  (not one of the first!) .  Other than desktops i have a couple lap tops, 
great when you need portable and exercise .

mad.scientist.at.large (a good madscientist)
--


11. Dec 2017 06:30 by bradf...@fstab.me:


> On Mon, 11 Dec 2017, at 13:22, > mad.scientist.at.la...@tutanota.com>  wrote:
>
>> interestingly, RH (and Centos) have both dumped systemd and gone to another 
>> system (I don't remember which one).  In fact they've done so retroactively 
>> on earlier versions.  Of course the continuing take over of linux by 
>> commercial interest is distorting development goals (time spent trying to 
>> destandardize/create new standards, make it harder to install and maintain, 
>> and new tools they don't have to give away).  
>>
>
> Have you got a source on that? I haven't read any news about RH switching to 
> yet another init system.
>
> I think they're fairly well wedded to Systemd, for better or for worse.
> --
> Richard
>
>

Re: [gentoo-user] Re: Is gnome becoming obligatory?

2017-12-11 Thread Richard Bradfield
On Mon, 11 Dec 2017, at 13:22, mad.scientist.at.la...@tutanota.com wrote:> 
interestingly, RH (and Centos) have both dumped systemd and gone to
> another system (I don't remember which one).  In fact they've done so
> retroactively on earlier versions.  Of course the continuing take over
> of linux by commercial interest is distorting development goals (time
> spent trying to destandardize/create new standards, make it harder to
> install and maintain, and new tools they don't have to give away).
Have you got a source on that? I haven't read any news about RH
switching to yet another init system.
I think they're fairly well wedded to Systemd, for better or for worse.
--
Richard



Re: [gentoo-user] Re: Is gnome becoming obligatory?

2017-12-11 Thread Kai Peter

On 2017-12-11 13:39, Mick wrote:

On Monday, 11 December 2017 11:59:03 GMT Jorge Almeida wrote:
On Sun, Dec 10, 2017 at 7:31 PM, Canek Peláez Valdés 


wrote:


> Just my two cents. I will not answer any reply to my little contribution
> to
> this thread;

Good. I can't remember any intervention from you that I would miss. Of
course, I wouldn't dream of telling people how they should think, nor
would I deny anyone the right to be an activist.

> Enjoy your echo chamber.

Thank you for your contribution, Dr. Yes, we know you're a Dr. We know
it because:


Crikey!  I didn't expect my question to trigger yet another thread of 
'systemd
Vs freedom of choice (non-systemd)' arguments.  Dr. Canek has been an 
advocate

This is the nature of a mailing list ... ;-)

of systemd for years now and has posted his views on this topic more 
than
once.  He has tried hard to make gentoo users see the light in the 
superiority

of systemd and put his arguments across.  He has also done a lot of
development work to establish systemd in Gentoo.  His views are 
somewhat
parochial - only those who (can) code have an influence if not a right 
to
determine the direction of travel - I paraphrase of course.  There is 
truth in
this and anyone can recognise that money can buy developer hours and 
direct

their development effort.

The facts remain that RHL and their employees have shaped the Linux 
eco-system
to suit their business interests;  spinning predictably and reliably 
thousands
of identical VMs in data centres.  The MSWindows monolithic stack 
architecture

is something they wanted/needed and this is what they developed.

The fact also remains that binary distros and other development 
projects
decided to gravitate towards major development areas (cloud and 
embedded
computing) where commercial interest and development demand has been 
greater.
Lack of devs and maintainers especially for smaller distros means they 
decided
to ride on the back of systemd and minimise their own development load. 
 Linux
IMHO there isn't a lack of devs and/or maintainers. To me the issue is 
that they doesn't work as good together as they should. To less 
compromises. To many forks. Thus, unfortunately, leads into more market 
fragmentation. It is good to have a choice, but it is not good to have a 
lot - to many - choices. And this is not limited to init systems.


exists on the desktop too, but this represents a really small 
percentage of PC
users.  Linux desktop users on Gentoo systems is an even smaller number 
and I

am guessing of an increasingly advanced age demographic.

I am grateful that Gentoo has retained openrc and provides a choice for 
those
of us who would prefer to not use systemd.  I use systemd on a couple 
of

systems out of necessity/convenience, but I would not like it on my PC
systems.  If I wanted this opaque Just Works™ philosophy I would have 
stayed
with MSWindows or AppleMac, both of which I have used for years and 
frustrated
me to hell - well MSWindows definitely does.  However, for the majority 
of the
population these OS remain the best suited choice.  So, I think we 
should live
& let live, but as gentoo users at least try to influence gentoo to 
retain a

freedom of choice most binary distros have walked away from.

Just my 2c's.
+1 in general ;-), even if I'm pretty sure some people will interpret 
something different.


--
Sent with eQmail-1.10



Re: [gentoo-user] Re: Is gnome becoming obligatory?

2017-12-11 Thread mad.scientist.at.large

mad.scientist.at.large (a good madscientist)
--


11. Dec 2017 05:39 by michaelkintz...@gmail.com:


> On Monday, 11 December 2017 11:59:03 GMT Jorge Almeida wrote:
>> On Sun, Dec 10, 2017 at 7:31 PM, Canek Peláez Valdés <>> can...@gmail.com>> 
>> > 
> wrote:
>
>> > Just my two cents. I will not answer any reply to my little contribution
>> > to
>> > this thread;
>>
>> Good. I can't remember any intervention from you that I would miss. Of
>> course, I wouldn't dream of telling people how they should think, nor
>> would I deny anyone the right to be an activist.
>>
>> > Enjoy your echo chamber.
>>
>> Thank you for your contribution, Dr. Yes, we know you're a Dr. We know
>> it because:
>
> Crikey!  I didn't expect my question to trigger yet another thread of 
> 'systemd 
> Vs freedom of choice (non-systemd)' arguments.  Dr. Canek has been an 
> advocate 
> of systemd for years now and has posted his views on this topic more than 
> once.  He has tried hard to make gentoo users see the light in the 
> superiority 
> of systemd and put his arguments across.  He has also done a lot of 
> development work to establish systemd in Gentoo.  His views are somewhat 
> parochial - only those who (can) code have an influence if not a right to 
> determine the direction of travel - I paraphrase of course.  There is truth 
> in 
> this and anyone can recognise that money can buy developer hours and direct 
> their development effort.
>
> The facts remain that RHL and their employees have shaped the Linux 
> eco-system 
> to suit their business interests;  spinning predictably and reliably 
> thousands 
> of identical VMs in data centres.  The MSWindows monolithic stack 
> architecture 
> is something they wanted/needed and this is what they developed.
>
> 
> Just my 2c's.
> -- 
> Regards,
> Mick




interestingly, RH (and Centos) have both dumped systemd and gone to another 
system (I don't remember which one).  In fact they've done so retroactively on 
earlier versions.  Of course the continuing take over of linux by commercial 
interest is distorting development goals (time spent trying to 
destandardize/create new standards, make it harder to install and maintain, and 
new tools they don't have to give away).  





It's really sad that people accepted an open source license and built a 
business for decades, and now   are now doing their best to keep free users 
out, way out of the loop (to the extent they can without technically violated 
the license).  It's really sad because these companies are all making good 
money (which is fine) but like many of the rich (not all) they want more $$ and 
are willing to be rather dishonorable about it.  It's a bad time for linux in 
many ways.  Personally, like Linus himself, I'm looking for the next free os.  





Do to it's long history and many, many donated hours,  design by  groups, and 
resulting complexity it's very hard to fix some of the incorrect/suboptimal 
decisions that are deep down, and most developers want to work on something new 
(not old and complicated like securing X).  Don't get me wrong, I love linux, 
but I'll also be learning bsd and looking for such a project.  Operating 
systems are big clumsy beast that require an incredible amount of work to 
realize and then maintain, but some are still willing to do such work for 
free/fun (I hope to know enough to help in a couple of years, I'm good at 
programing but i'll need to do better/more correct work consistent with good 
style and design and learn a lot about real/ideal operating systems and the 
inevitable trade offs).




Then there are the promoters of questionable tech/implementations, many as 
dishonest and childish as some of our politicians, and like many politicians 
it's become more of a sales game, with people making up data, lying, and 
generally disrespecting their' users.  A strategy that can work for awhile, 
until they've converted their' good reputation into a fast buck (most of the 
big companies are doing it, triplite for example, once commercial grade and 
well respected, but now sellers of sub-consumer grade gear).  





And for embeded applications systemd is nothing but a liability, forcing dev 
tools and a server onto a router etc. just opens up new vulnerabilities for 
basicly nothing (other than a graphical interface server that very limited).   
The main thing i love about linux is choice, you can use the cool edgy stuff 
that's still buggy or the more stable or both depending on your' mood and goal. 
 Your mileage will vary.


Re: [gentoo-user] Re: Is gnome becoming obligatory?

2017-12-11 Thread Mick
On Monday, 11 December 2017 11:59:03 GMT Jorge Almeida wrote:
> On Sun, Dec 10, 2017 at 7:31 PM, Canek Peláez Valdés  
wrote:

> > Just my two cents. I will not answer any reply to my little contribution
> > to
> > this thread;
> 
> Good. I can't remember any intervention from you that I would miss. Of
> course, I wouldn't dream of telling people how they should think, nor
> would I deny anyone the right to be an activist.
> 
> > Enjoy your echo chamber.
> 
> Thank you for your contribution, Dr. Yes, we know you're a Dr. We know
> it because:

Crikey!  I didn't expect my question to trigger yet another thread of 'systemd 
Vs freedom of choice (non-systemd)' arguments.  Dr. Canek has been an advocate 
of systemd for years now and has posted his views on this topic more than 
once.  He has tried hard to make gentoo users see the light in the superiority 
of systemd and put his arguments across.  He has also done a lot of 
development work to establish systemd in Gentoo.  His views are somewhat 
parochial - only those who (can) code have an influence if not a right to 
determine the direction of travel - I paraphrase of course.  There is truth in 
this and anyone can recognise that money can buy developer hours and direct 
their development effort.

The facts remain that RHL and their employees have shaped the Linux eco-system 
to suit their business interests;  spinning predictably and reliably thousands 
of identical VMs in data centres.  The MSWindows monolithic stack architecture 
is something they wanted/needed and this is what they developed.

The fact also remains that binary distros and other development projects 
decided to gravitate towards major development areas (cloud and embedded 
computing) where commercial interest and development demand has been greater.  
Lack of devs and maintainers especially for smaller distros means they decided 
to ride on the back of systemd and minimise their own development load.  Linux 
exists on the desktop too, but this represents a really small percentage of PC 
users.  Linux desktop users on Gentoo systems is an even smaller number and I 
am guessing of an increasingly advanced age demographic.

I am grateful that Gentoo has retained openrc and provides a choice for those 
of us who would prefer to not use systemd.  I use systemd on a couple of 
systems out of necessity/convenience, but I would not like it on my PC 
systems.  If I wanted this opaque Just Works™ philosophy I would have stayed 
with MSWindows or AppleMac, both of which I have used for years and frustrated 
me to hell - well MSWindows definitely does.  However, for the majority of the 
population these OS remain the best suited choice.  So, I think we should live 
& let live, but as gentoo users at least try to influence gentoo to retain a 
freedom of choice most binary distros have walked away from.

Just my 2c's.
-- 
Regards,
Mick

signature.asc
Description: This is a digitally signed message part.


Re: [gentoo-user] Re: Is gnome becoming obligatory?

2017-12-11 Thread Jorge Almeida
On Sun, Dec 10, 2017 at 7:31 PM, Canek Peláez Valdés  wrote:
> On Sun, Dec 10, 2017 at 3:55 PM, Jorge Almeida  wrote:
> [...]

Documentation not for "end-users", "just works" stuff, users should
not stress their little heads, we Drs. know best? I rest my case:
Windows/Apple.

>

> And having a couple of Gentoo
> boxes running Apache doesn't make anyone an administrator, BTW.

Agreed. And an academic title per se doesn't make anyone's personal
opinions relevant. I'm not an administrator, just an end-user. I do
end-use supervision, since a long time ago. It was not invented by the
author of systemd, it was not invented by the authors of launchd.
End-users who choose to use linux do it for a reason. It is possible
to learn stuff and to really *administrate* one's computers when using
a OS that is not of the "we-know-best" kind.

>

>
> Just my two cents. I will not answer any reply to my little contribution to
> this thread;

Good. I can't remember any intervention from you that I would miss. Of
course, I wouldn't dream of telling people how they should think, nor
would I deny anyone the right to be an activist.

>
> Enjoy your echo chamber.

Thank you for your contribution, Dr. Yes, we know you're a Dr. We know
it because:

a) You told us so, some time ago. (Yes, we were all very happy for you.)

b) About the same time, you replaced the arrogant little picture of
[part of] your face (in the gmail window) by a more standard one.

Regards,

Jorge Almeida


> --
> Dr. Canek Peláez Valdés
> Profesor de Carrera Asociado C



Re: [gentoo-user] Re: Is gnome becoming obligatory?

2017-12-11 Thread Corbin
On 12/10/2017 11:31 PM, R0b0t1 wrote:
> Against my better judgement,
>
> On Sun, Dec 10, 2017 at 9:31 PM, Canek Peláez Valdés  wrote:
>> Up to a point, the same can be said about systemd; although many of its
>> programs can be and are used by end users, most of it is for distro
>> builders, programmers and administrators. And having a couple of Gentoo
>> boxes running Apache doesn't make anyone an administrator, BTW.
>>
> I have met Gentoo users who maintain, for fun, far more complex and
> capable systems than some system administrators who are paid for their
> work. There is no reason you are any more credible than a random
> mailing list user.
>
>> That's why most of Gentoo systemd users (and we are *a lot*; Gentoo has
>> great systemd support with several Gentoo devs collaborating with the
>> project) usually just ignore this kind of threads. Most of the time is a lot
>> of people which don't use it badmouthing a really cool piece of technology
>> that has been adopted by all large (and heavily used) Linux distributions
>> because the people that understand its technical merits realize that, for
>> the *general case*, its benefits outweigh whatever costs (in many cases
>> imaginary) it may have. And besides, for us it just works™, quietly running
>> in the background.
>>
> If you are saying this then you are choosing to ignore the technical
> arguments against systemd. You can claim you don't care and that is
> fine, but you've ignored what people are talking about and have
> injected your opinion into the discussion with a false air of
> superiority.
>
> The complaints in this thread may be a little extreme, but ultimately
> I agree these closely connected binary systems are not easily
> maintainable and are opaque to users.
>
> Cheers,
>  R0b0t1
>
@R0b0t1

Agreed.

The phase "single point of failure" comes to mind.

In the past I have been forced to reload systems using "systemd" because
I was unable to figure out how to fix "systemd" init problems.

If the system uses ( SysV, OpenRC, BSD / Slackware ) type init, it is
not a major problem to fix.

Corbin




Re: [gentoo-user] Re: Is gnome becoming obligatory?

2017-12-10 Thread R0b0t1
Against my better judgement,

On Sun, Dec 10, 2017 at 9:31 PM, Canek Peláez Valdés  wrote:
> Up to a point, the same can be said about systemd; although many of its
> programs can be and are used by end users, most of it is for distro
> builders, programmers and administrators. And having a couple of Gentoo
> boxes running Apache doesn't make anyone an administrator, BTW.
>

I have met Gentoo users who maintain, for fun, far more complex and
capable systems than some system administrators who are paid for their
work. There is no reason you are any more credible than a random
mailing list user.

> That's why most of Gentoo systemd users (and we are *a lot*; Gentoo has
> great systemd support with several Gentoo devs collaborating with the
> project) usually just ignore this kind of threads. Most of the time is a lot
> of people which don't use it badmouthing a really cool piece of technology
> that has been adopted by all large (and heavily used) Linux distributions
> because the people that understand its technical merits realize that, for
> the *general case*, its benefits outweigh whatever costs (in many cases
> imaginary) it may have. And besides, for us it just works™, quietly running
> in the background.
>

If you are saying this then you are choosing to ignore the technical
arguments against systemd. You can claim you don't care and that is
fine, but you've ignored what people are talking about and have
injected your opinion into the discussion with a false air of
superiority.

The complaints in this thread may be a little extreme, but ultimately
I agree these closely connected binary systems are not easily
maintainable and are opaque to users.

Cheers,
 R0b0t1



Re: [gentoo-user] Re: Is gnome becoming obligatory?

2017-12-10 Thread Mike Gilbert
On Sun, Dec 10, 2017 at 11:37 PM, Ian Zimmerman  wrote:
> On 2017-12-10 21:31, Canek Peláez Valdés wrote:
>
>> You just don't notice udisks, it's quietly running in the background
>> doing its thing without taking either much disk space, memory, nor CPU
>> usage.
>
> I know Dr. Valdés will not respond but maybe someone else will, as this
> is a factual question.
>
> Last time I met udisks in person, it polled all drives on the system
> every second.  Has that changed?

udisksd does not appear to poll devices. It waits for device change
events to be sent over a netlink socket from udev. udev waits for
events to be sent from the kernel.



Re: [gentoo-user] Re: Is gnome becoming obligatory?

2017-12-10 Thread Canek Peláez Valdés
On Sun, Dec 10, 2017 at 3:55 PM, Jorge Almeida  wrote:
[...]
> Yes, it seems appropriate for Windows refugees and linuxers suffering
> from Apple-envy. When I said I didn't understand why it would be
> useful, I meant that the documentation in the site is all but clear
> about the goodness of its product. Lots of freedesktop/dbus
> mumbo-jumbo, though.

The documentation for udisks is not intended for end-users; it's intended
for developers that whish to use its benefits for their projects, GNOME and
KDE included. When used right (which implies a good integration done by the
distro), the software depending on it just works™, which makes
documentation for the end user program also redundant. You just don't
notice udisks, it's quietly running in the background doing its thing
without taking either much disk space, memory, nor CPU usage. For the
*general case*, its benefits outweigh the almost negligible amount of
resources it consumes (BTW, build time of udisks in Gentoo is about 21
seconds).

Up to a point, the same can be said about systemd; although many of its
programs can be and are used by end users, most of it is for distro
builders, programmers and administrators. And having a couple of Gentoo
boxes running Apache doesn't make anyone an administrator, BTW.

That's why most of Gentoo systemd users (and we are *a lot*; Gentoo has
great systemd support with several Gentoo devs collaborating with the
project) usually just ignore this kind of threads. Most of the time is a
lot of people which don't use it badmouthing a really cool piece of
technology that has been adopted by all large (and heavily used) Linux
distributions because the people that understand its technical merits
realize that, for the *general case*, its benefits outweigh whatever costs
(in many cases imaginary) it may have. And besides, for us it just works™,
quietly running in the background.

Just my two cents. I will not answer any reply to my little contribution to
this thread; but of course don't hesitate to explain to me why I'm
completely wrong, or a Lennart fanboi, or that I don't know what I'm
talking about. I just will not partake in such a joyful and enlightening
"discussion" (sadly the same conclusion I have arrived for the lasts few
years regarding this mailing list).

Enjoy your echo chamber.

Regards.
--
Dr. Canek Peláez Valdés
Profesor de Carrera Asociado C
Departamento de Matemáticas
Facultad de Ciencias
Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México


Re: [gentoo-user] Re: Is gnome becoming obligatory?

2017-12-10 Thread Walter Dnes
On Sun, Dec 10, 2017 at 09:02:24PM +, Wols Lists wrote
> On 10/12/17 10:13, Alan Mackenzie wrote:
> > I've no idea how good systemd is.  It's not been through the normal
> > process of choice and selection that other successful packages have.
> > It was forced on people.  But being forced to have a binary system log,
> > being forced (so I have heard) to have an http server running, ,
> > doesn't make it an attractive package for me.
> 
> Oddly enough, although the details are different, that passage I've
> quoted pretty accurately describes how I feel about Gnome ... :-)

  I can't find it right now on Google, but I vaguely remember that
Lennart asked the Gnome people to make systemd a hard dependancy.  Not
much later logind, which is required by Gnome, picks up systemd as a
hard dependancy.

-- 
Walter Dnes 
I don't run "desktop environments"; I run useful applications



Re: [gentoo-user] Re: Is gnome becoming obligatory?

2017-12-10 Thread Jorge Almeida
On Sun, Dec 10, 2017 at 1:01 PM, Ian Zimmerman  wrote:
> On 2017-12-09 12:00, Jorge Almeida wrote:
>
>> Are you sure you need udisks? And policykit? I'm guessing you have
>> some default USE variables which if removed would contribute to a
>> cleaner system. I just checked the documentation about udisks in the
>> freedesktop site. I didn't manage to understand why it would be useful
>> (my fault, probably) but I understood enough to decide I wouldn't want
>> such stuff in my system.
>
> AFAIK there are 2 main reasons for udisks:
>
> 1. automounting everything that moves, and even things that do not move.
>By automounting I mean fully automatic mounting, ie. without any
>click or other user action.  Leaving aside the desirability of this,
>it can be mostly replaced by a set of udev rules, even though udev
>authors frown of such usage.
>
> 2. tracking media availability of optical drives, which maddeningly do
>not provide any interrupt-driven way to do that.  In spite of my
>advancing age I can still remember when I insert a disc into my
>drive, so if I don't need 1. above I don't need this either.
>
> Ergo, I avoid udisks.
>
Yes, it seems appropriate for Windows refugees and linuxers suffering
from Apple-envy. When I said I didn't understand why it would be
useful, I meant that the documentation in the site is all but clear
about the goodness of its product. Lots of freedesktop/dbus
mumbo-jumbo, though.

Regards



Re: [gentoo-user] Re: Is gnome becoming obligatory?

2017-12-10 Thread Wols Lists
On 10/12/17 10:13, Alan Mackenzie wrote:
> I've no idea how good systemd is.  It's not been through the normal
> process of choice and selection that other successful packages have.  It
> was forced on people.  But being forced to have a binary system log,
> being forced (so I have heard) to have an http server running, ,
> doesn't make it an attractive package for me.

Oddly enough, although the details are different, that passage I've
quoted pretty accurately describes how I feel about Gnome ... :-)

Cheers,
Wol



Re: [gentoo-user] Re: Is gnome becoming obligatory?

2017-12-10 Thread karl
Jorge Almedia:n
...
> (Of course, the aforementioned fingers are exceedingly sticky. We all
> have to live with udev, after all...)

No, we don't have to, this is gentoo after all. You can still use a
static dev if you wish even if some packages do insists on udev even
though some of thoose dependancies are bogus.

Regards,
/Karl Hammar

---
Aspö Data
Lilla Aspö 148
S-742 94 Östhammar
Sweden
+46 173 140 57





Re: [gentoo-user] Re: Is gnome becoming obligatory?

2017-12-10 Thread Alan McKinnon
On 10/12/2017 13:55, Mart Raudsepp wrote:
> On P, 2017-12-10 at 08:56 +, Jorge Almeida wrote:
>> On Sun, Dec 10, 2017 at 6:12 AM, R0b0t1  wrote:
>>> On Sat, Dec 9, 2017 at 5:36 PM, Peter Humphrey >> uk> wrote:
 On Saturday, 9 December 2017 12:00:12 GMT Jorge Almeida wrote:
> On Sat, Dec 9, 2017 at 10:45 AM, Mick  m> wrote:
>> Thank you all for detailed and clear replies.  You'd forgive
>> me for
>> being (a little) paranoid about Poettering's fingers getting
>> anywhere
>> near my systems.>
>> :-p
>
> Are you sure you need udisks? And policykit?

 I'm pretty sure Mick runs KDE, which requires both of those.

>>>
>>> Eventually emerging @world will just pull in the entirety of the
>>> Gentoo package repository, and we won't have to worry about what is
>>> or
>>> isn't necessary.
>>>
>> Not that I would object much to have gnome-common if I needed it (I
>> don't), but it is a bit
>> shocking that installing kde stuff pulls gnome stuff. After all,
>> they're supposed to be alternative worldviews, er, desktop
>> environments. Maybe the relevant people should stop and think whether
>> unbridled complexity is a good idea?
> 
> So you are suggesting that each desktop environment must NIH
> everything?
> 
> Want an auto-mounter and disk monitor and more for a modern desktop
> experience - reimplement udisks.
> Want a secure permissions handling framework for the desktop -
> reimplement polkit.
> Want a user account service handler for desktop logins - reimplement
> accountsservice.
> Want color profiles handling for monitors and co, and other associated
> stuff - reimplement colord.
> And so on.
> 
> That's all "GNOME stuff" by your definition, with GNOME Foundation
> members being the project leaders or starters.
> 
> Meanwhile gnome-common is just a package for m4 macros for the older
> autotools using world, and is deprecated in favor of autoconf-archive,
> which had the good things of gnome-common integrated into it. Please
> remove that package too, if you want to NIH.
> 
> 
> People, this is open source. Stop advocating NIH and make use of the
> benefits of open source and let the people actually doing stuff
> collaborate on things and re-use/share projects as they see fit, for
> less time waste and more making GNU/Linux (desktops) great over the
> proprietary others.
> 
> 

Let's say we renamed the package:

s/gnome-common/useful-build-stuffs/g

No other change, just a package rename. And suddenly this entire thread
never ever happens at all.

People, you all need to step back, sleep on it, and knock off the
knee-jerking. It is 4 useful m4 files, utterly dwarfed by any package
you can mention that installs even a single man page.

-- 
Alan McKinnon
alan.mckin...@gmail.com




Re: [gentoo-user] Re: Is gnome becoming obligatory?

2017-12-10 Thread Mart Raudsepp
On P, 2017-12-10 at 08:56 +, Jorge Almeida wrote:
> On Sun, Dec 10, 2017 at 6:12 AM, R0b0t1  wrote:
> > On Sat, Dec 9, 2017 at 5:36 PM, Peter Humphrey  > uk> wrote:
> > > On Saturday, 9 December 2017 12:00:12 GMT Jorge Almeida wrote:
> > > > On Sat, Dec 9, 2017 at 10:45 AM, Mick  > > > m> wrote:
> > > > > Thank you all for detailed and clear replies.  You'd forgive
> > > > > me for
> > > > > being (a little) paranoid about Poettering's fingers getting
> > > > > anywhere
> > > > > near my systems.>
> > > > > :-p
> > > > 
> > > > Are you sure you need udisks? And policykit?
> > > 
> > > I'm pretty sure Mick runs KDE, which requires both of those.
> > > 
> > 
> > Eventually emerging @world will just pull in the entirety of the
> > Gentoo package repository, and we won't have to worry about what is
> > or
> > isn't necessary.
> > 
> Not that I would object much to have gnome-common if I needed it (I
> don't), but it is a bit
> shocking that installing kde stuff pulls gnome stuff. After all,
> they're supposed to be alternative worldviews, er, desktop
> environments. Maybe the relevant people should stop and think whether
> unbridled complexity is a good idea?

So you are suggesting that each desktop environment must NIH
everything?

Want an auto-mounter and disk monitor and more for a modern desktop
experience - reimplement udisks.
Want a secure permissions handling framework for the desktop -
reimplement polkit.
Want a user account service handler for desktop logins - reimplement
accountsservice.
Want color profiles handling for monitors and co, and other associated
stuff - reimplement colord.
And so on.

That's all "GNOME stuff" by your definition, with GNOME Foundation
members being the project leaders or starters.

Meanwhile gnome-common is just a package for m4 macros for the older
autotools using world, and is deprecated in favor of autoconf-archive,
which had the good things of gnome-common integrated into it. Please
remove that package too, if you want to NIH.


People, this is open source. Stop advocating NIH and make use of the
benefits of open source and let the people actually doing stuff
collaborate on things and re-use/share projects as they see fit, for
less time waste and more making GNU/Linux (desktops) great over the
proprietary others.




Re: [gentoo-user] Re: Is gnome becoming obligatory?

2017-12-10 Thread Jorge Almeida
On Sun, Dec 10, 2017 at 9:55 AM, Wols Lists  wrote:
> On 09/12/17 12:08, Alan McKinnon wrote:
>> I'm all in favour of Lennart-bashing, but let's keep the bashing to what
>> he's responsible for.
>
> 
>
> As far as I can tell, the most egregious thing he's responsible for is
> for wanting a well-designed system that works!
>
> Face it, linux is a hodge-podge of things thrown together, and held
> together with baling wire and sealing wax. Lennart doesn't want a system
> where a small failure in one place cascades and brings down a load of
> stuff elsewhere.
>

And, of course, a system of his doing will not have a single point of
failure. At all, at all. And it is well-designed, to boot.

Why not get rid of all the bazaar stuff altogether? They could just
fork linux. Minus the name, of course. I could suggest a name, but
won't. But maybe it is more appealing to grab something that is
already there? Not to mention that it is way more friendly to the
interests of a certain corporation.
Regards



Re: [gentoo-user] Re: Is gnome becoming obligatory?

2017-12-10 Thread Alan Mackenzie
Hello, Wols

On Sun, Dec 10, 2017 at 09:55:45 +, Wols Lists wrote:
> On 09/12/17 12:08, Alan McKinnon wrote:
> > I'm all in favour of Lennart-bashing, but let's keep the bashing to what
> > he's responsible for.

> 



> As far as I can tell, the most egregious thing he's responsible for is
> for wanting a well-designed system that works!

No, he's done far worse than that.

> Face it, linux is a hodge-podge of things thrown together, and held
> together with baling wire and sealing wax.

It's a hodge-podge, yes, but held together with robust protocols.

> Lennart doesn't want a system where a small failure in one place
> cascades and brings down a load of stuff elsewhere.

Neither do I, and neither does anybody.  GNU/Linux is not like that, and
never has been.  It has traditionally been a massive pain to set up,
though, something which has improved dramatically over the last ten or
twenty years.

> Granted he's not necessarily the most politic of people, and has ruffled
> a lot of feathers, but I'd much rather a system he's cleaned up, than a
> system where everything hangs together on a knife-edge.

His motivation seems to be ego.  To force everybody to use his software.
He did this by, amongst other things, abusing the trust placed in him to
maintain udev.  Early on he abandoned support for udev for everybody but
users of his new init system, systemd, in an attempt (sadly successful)
to force "everybody" into using systemd.

I've no idea how good systemd is.  It's not been through the normal
process of choice and selection that other successful packages have.  It
was forced on people.  But being forced to have a binary system log,
being forced (so I have heard) to have an http server running, ,
doesn't make it an attractive package for me.

> Cheers,
> Wol

-- 
Alan Mackenzie (Nuremberg, Germany).



Re: [gentoo-user] Re: Is gnome becoming obligatory?

2017-12-10 Thread Wols Lists
On 09/12/17 12:08, Alan McKinnon wrote:
> I'm all in favour of Lennart-bashing, but let's keep the bashing to what
> he's responsible for.



As far as I can tell, the most egregious thing he's responsible for is
for wanting a well-designed system that works!

Face it, linux is a hodge-podge of things thrown together, and held
together with baling wire and sealing wax. Lennart doesn't want a system
where a small failure in one place cascades and brings down a load of
stuff elsewhere.

Granted he's not necessarily the most politic of people, and has ruffled
a lot of feathers, but I'd much rather a system he's cleaned up, than a
system where everything hangs together on a knife-edge.

Cheers,
Wol



Re: [gentoo-user] Re: Is gnome becoming obligatory?

2017-12-10 Thread Jorge Almeida
On Sun, Dec 10, 2017 at 6:12 AM, R0b0t1  wrote:
> On Sat, Dec 9, 2017 at 5:36 PM, Peter Humphrey  wrote:
>> On Saturday, 9 December 2017 12:00:12 GMT Jorge Almeida wrote:
>>> On Sat, Dec 9, 2017 at 10:45 AM, Mick  wrote:
>>> > Thank you all for detailed and clear replies.  You'd forgive me for
>>> > being (a little) paranoid about Poettering's fingers getting anywhere
>>> > near my systems.>
>>> > :-p
>>>
>>> Are you sure you need udisks? And policykit?
>>
>> I'm pretty sure Mick runs KDE, which requires both of those.
>>
>
> Eventually emerging @world will just pull in the entirety of the
> Gentoo package repository, and we won't have to worry about what is or
> isn't necessary.
>
Not that I would object much to have gnome-common if I needed it (I
don't), but it is a bit
shocking that installing kde stuff pulls gnome stuff. After all,
they're supposed to be alternative worldviews, er, desktop
environments. Maybe the relevant people should stop and think whether
unbridled complexity is a good idea?

(Of course, this is not a Gentoo-specific issue.)

Jorge



Re: [gentoo-user] Re: Is gnome becoming obligatory?

2017-12-10 Thread Mick
On Sunday, 10 December 2017 06:12:07 GMT R0b0t1 wrote:
> On Sat, Dec 9, 2017 at 5:36 PM, Peter Humphrey  
wrote:
> > On Saturday, 9 December 2017 12:00:12 GMT Jorge Almeida wrote:

> >> Are you sure you need udisks? And policykit?
> > 
> > I'm pretty sure Mick runs KDE, which requires both of those.
> 
> Eventually emerging @world will just pull in the entirety of the
> Gentoo package repository, and we won't have to worry about what is or
> isn't necessary.

Yes, I run the plasma profile.  Also I understand the udisks package is 
necessary to allow mounting disks by clicking on the GUI.

-- 
Regards,
Mick

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Re: [gentoo-user] Re: Is gnome becoming obligatory?

2017-12-09 Thread R0b0t1
On Sat, Dec 9, 2017 at 5:36 PM, Peter Humphrey  wrote:
> On Saturday, 9 December 2017 12:00:12 GMT Jorge Almeida wrote:
>> On Sat, Dec 9, 2017 at 10:45 AM, Mick  wrote:
>> > Thank you all for detailed and clear replies.  You'd forgive me for
>> > being (a little) paranoid about Poettering's fingers getting anywhere
>> > near my systems.>
>> > :-p
>>
>> Are you sure you need udisks? And policykit?
>
> I'm pretty sure Mick runs KDE, which requires both of those.
>

Eventually emerging @world will just pull in the entirety of the
Gentoo package repository, and we won't have to worry about what is or
isn't necessary.



Re: [gentoo-user] Re: Is gnome becoming obligatory?

2017-12-09 Thread Peter Humphrey
On Saturday, 9 December 2017 12:00:12 GMT Jorge Almeida wrote:
> On Sat, Dec 9, 2017 at 10:45 AM, Mick  wrote:
> > Thank you all for detailed and clear replies.  You'd forgive me for
> > being (a little) paranoid about Poettering's fingers getting anywhere
> > near my systems.> 
> > :-p
> 
> Are you sure you need udisks? And policykit?

I'm pretty sure Mick runs KDE, which requires both of those.

-- 
Regards,
Peter.




Re: [gentoo-user] Re: Is gnome becoming obligatory?

2017-12-09 Thread Alan McKinnon
On 09/12/2017 14:04, taii...@gmx.com wrote:
> On 12/09/2017 05:45 AM, Mick wrote:
>> On Saturday, 9 December 2017 10:34:32 GMT Nikos Chantziaras wrote:
>>> On 09/12/17 11:51, Mick wrote:
 I've seen gnome-base/gnome-common pulled in on more than one
 systems, all
 of>
 which have USE="-gnome" set:
    # emerge -uaNDvt world

 These are the packages that would be merged, in reverse order:
 [...]
 Calculating dependencies... done!
 [ebuild  N ]  gnome-base/gnome-common-3.18.0-r1:3::gentoo
 USE="autoconf-archive" 153 KiB
 [...]

 All systems are on profile:  default/linux/amd64/17.0/desktop/plasma

 Why is gnome-base/gnome-common needed?
>>> It's an extremely lightweight package. There seem to be some packages
>>> that need files from it. The package itself only installs these files:
>>>
>>>     $ qlist gnome-common
>>>     /usr/bin/gnome-autogen.sh
>>>     /usr/share/aclocal/gnome-common.m4
>>>     /usr/share/aclocal/gnome-compiler-flags.m4
>>>     /usr/share/aclocal/gnome-code-coverage.m4
>>>     /usr/share/doc/gnome-common-3.18.0-r1/ChangeLog.bz2
>>>     /usr/share/doc/gnome-common-3.18.0-r1/README.bz2
>>>
>>> So basically it only copies some small text files to /usr. It doesn't
>>> build anything.
>> Thank you all for detailed and clear replies.  You'd forgive me for
>> being (a
>> little) paranoid about Poettering's fingers getting anywhere near my
>> systems.
>> :-p
>>
> For now, only a few text files - tomorrow - many more.
> 
> You give poettering an inch he will take hundred miles.
> 


Why are you laying this at Poettering's door?

To the best of my knowledge, he is not behind udisks{,2} or
gnome-common, so why include him here?

I'm all in favour of Lennart-bashing, but let's keep the bashing to what
he's responsible for.

-- 
Alan McKinnon
alan.mckin...@gmail.com




Re: [gentoo-user] Re: Is gnome becoming obligatory?

2017-12-09 Thread taii...@gmx.com

On 12/09/2017 05:45 AM, Mick wrote:

On Saturday, 9 December 2017 10:34:32 GMT Nikos Chantziaras wrote:

On 09/12/17 11:51, Mick wrote:

I've seen gnome-base/gnome-common pulled in on more than one systems, all
of>
which have USE="-gnome" set:
   # emerge -uaNDvt world

These are the packages that would be merged, in reverse order:
[...]
Calculating dependencies... done!
[ebuild  N ]  gnome-base/gnome-common-3.18.0-r1:3::gentoo
USE="autoconf-archive" 153 KiB
[...]

All systems are on profile:  default/linux/amd64/17.0/desktop/plasma

Why is gnome-base/gnome-common needed?

It's an extremely lightweight package. There seem to be some packages
that need files from it. The package itself only installs these files:

$ qlist gnome-common
/usr/bin/gnome-autogen.sh
/usr/share/aclocal/gnome-common.m4
/usr/share/aclocal/gnome-compiler-flags.m4
/usr/share/aclocal/gnome-code-coverage.m4
/usr/share/doc/gnome-common-3.18.0-r1/ChangeLog.bz2
/usr/share/doc/gnome-common-3.18.0-r1/README.bz2

So basically it only copies some small text files to /usr. It doesn't
build anything.

Thank you all for detailed and clear replies.  You'd forgive me for being (a
little) paranoid about Poettering's fingers getting anywhere near my systems.
:-p


For now, only a few text files - tomorrow - many more.

You give poettering an inch he will take hundred miles.



Re: [gentoo-user] Re: Is gnome becoming obligatory?

2017-12-09 Thread Jorge Almeida
On Sat, Dec 9, 2017 at 10:45 AM, Mick  wrote:


>
> Thank you all for detailed and clear replies.  You'd forgive me for being (a
> little) paranoid about Poettering's fingers getting anywhere near my systems.
> :-p
>
Are you sure you need udisks? And policykit? I'm guessing you have
some default USE variables which if removed would contribute to a
cleaner system. I just checked the documentation about udisks in the
freedesktop site. I didn't manage to understand why it would be useful
(my fault, probably) but I understood enough to decide I wouldn't want
such stuff in my system.

(Of course, the aforementioned fingers are exceedingly sticky. We all
have to live with udev, after all...)

Regards

Jorge Almeida



Re: [gentoo-user] Re: Is gnome becoming obligatory?

2017-12-09 Thread Mick
On Saturday, 9 December 2017 10:34:32 GMT Nikos Chantziaras wrote:
> On 09/12/17 11:51, Mick wrote:
> > I've seen gnome-base/gnome-common pulled in on more than one systems, all
> > of> 
> > which have USE="-gnome" set:
> >   # emerge -uaNDvt world
> > 
> > These are the packages that would be merged, in reverse order:
> > [...]
> > Calculating dependencies... done!
> > [ebuild  N ]  gnome-base/gnome-common-3.18.0-r1:3::gentoo
> > USE="autoconf-archive" 153 KiB
> > [...]
> > 
> > All systems are on profile:  default/linux/amd64/17.0/desktop/plasma
> > 
> > Why is gnome-base/gnome-common needed?
> 
> It's an extremely lightweight package. There seem to be some packages
> that need files from it. The package itself only installs these files:
> 
>$ qlist gnome-common
>/usr/bin/gnome-autogen.sh
>/usr/share/aclocal/gnome-common.m4
>/usr/share/aclocal/gnome-compiler-flags.m4
>/usr/share/aclocal/gnome-code-coverage.m4
>/usr/share/doc/gnome-common-3.18.0-r1/ChangeLog.bz2
>/usr/share/doc/gnome-common-3.18.0-r1/README.bz2
> 
> So basically it only copies some small text files to /usr. It doesn't
> build anything.

Thank you all for detailed and clear replies.  You'd forgive me for being (a 
little) paranoid about Poettering's fingers getting anywhere near my systems.  
:-p

-- 
Regards,
Mick

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