uselessd - a fork of systemd

by
Anonymous Coward
in linux on (#2SNR)
A fork of systemd has recently emerged, calling itself "uselessd (the useless daemon, or the daemon that uses less... depending on your viewpoint)".

They describe the project as such:
uselessd is a project which aims to reduce systemd to a base initd, process supervisor and transactional dependency system, while minimizing intrusiveness and isolationism. Basically, it's systemd with the superfluous stuff cut out, a (relatively) coherent idea of what it wants to be, support for non-glibc platforms and an approach that aims to minimize complicated design.

uselessd is still in its early stages and it is not recommended for regular use or system integration, but nonetheless, below is what we have thus far.
They then go on to list features such as support for musl libc and uClibc, decoupling from journald and udevd, removal of superfluous unit types and daemons unrelated to process management, as well as the preliminary foundation for potential future ports to non-Linux systems.

This is certainly an interesting development in the entire systemd saga.

Re: Ignore Corruption?? (Score: 0)

by Anonymous Coward on 2014-09-24 12:55 (#2SW4)

Agreed about XML of course, and yes text "log files" COULD be written randomly, but they're not. I don't know about systrmd's binary log files, which is why I'm asking. It would seem silly to switch to a binary format and continue to do nothing more than append uncompressed ASCII equivalent byte strings to the end of a file. I just doubt the systemd logs work that way, but I do not know. Thanks for the feedback.
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