Linux kernel hacker's open rant about systemd

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in linux on (#3V8)
Linux kernel hacker Christopher Barry has engaged a full frontal assault of the systemd Linux subsystem and its creator, Lennart Poettering, on an "Open Letter to the Linux world" published on the Linux kernel hackers' mailing list. Here's a taste:
So why would very smart people who love and use Linux want to create or embrace such a creepy 'Master of All' daemon? Ostensibly, it's for the reasons they say, as I mentioned at the top. But partially I think it's from a lack of experience. Not a lack as in programming hours, but a lack as in time on the Planet. Intelligence alone is not a substitute for life experience and, yes I'll say it, wisdom. There's no manual for wisdom. Implementing systemd by distros is not a wise move for them over the long term. It will, in fact, be their ultimate undoing.
Systemd has been no stranger to controversy. It broke a lot of systems, and important figures in the Linux world have registered their doubt about the replacement to the well-known System V init system, which was a fully transparent collection of human-readable scripts but that led to slow boot times. It will be interesting to see if Barry's rant generates a groundswell of antagonism against the new system, or if it gets ignored, or if it leads to meaningful debate and change.

[Ed. note: picked up this story from comp.misc. Thanks, Rich!]

Re: It's fine (Score: 0)

by Anonymous Coward on 2014-08-14 10:42 (#3VC)

What advantages does systemd have exactly? Almost everything new in systemd had already been solved in a a more sane fashion elsewhere. All it's done for me is break stuff that I wouldn't even think to check because... "an init wouldn't do that". More the fool me for thinking systemd was an init system rather than some bloated POS parasite with tentacles reaching every corner of the OS. The icing on the cake is that every critique on basic design or suitable functionality for an init system is met by the developers with a "because fuck you!".
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