On Thu, Jan 23, 2014 at 1:07 PM, Mike O'Dell wrote: > re: systemd vs procd vs etcd... > > If other distros have largely converged to systemd, > is it worthwhile for CeroWrt to do something different? > This assumes that the daemons in question have already or > are in process of becoming systemd-compatible. If that is > indeed the case, is it really worthwhile to spend time > supporting something different? > > not trying to re-open old wounds, just wondering how many > different approaches are actually "better" in some material > way and how many are just "different". > > I've watched Apple go through the pains of moving all the > lifetime control of services to launchd. It took a long time to > justify it being different, but now that it's done, the fact > there is only ONE place to look is really a feature. One thing, > for instance, is that the Xserver and its helpers all start > automagically when an X11 binary is run. Likewise, making > a daemon periodic instead of continuous is changed in just > one place - not moved from one to another. > > My point is that making is truly better, as opposed to "just > different, yet again" requires doing the whole job, not just > a different subset of it. So if there is a base of systemd-capable > versions of the daemons in question, just use those to avoid > the work. or do the whole job an import launchd. (which i'm > *not* lobbying for!) > > -mo > Mike, CeroWrt is an upstream development version of OpenWrt. One of the current constraints of OpenWrt is that it still (for its own good reasons) targeted at very small flash routers (8mb, and even 4mb flash routers). When I last looked at systemd, it's footprint looked larger than would likely be feasible given those constraints: granted, I did not do a really careful analysis of systemd's footprint, which is probably only knowable by doing a full port. So for the moment, I expect our attention needs to be elsewhere (though I do like systemd from what I've seen of it). But without funding to bear the costs of such a fork from OpenWrt, it can't fly. I expect the flash constraints will eventually ease; the question is when... Funding for these projects (OpenWrt/CeroWrt) would also help, as it would make sense to do a fork as it's clear that the flash constraint is something that should bite the dust someday and sooner would be better than later... - Jim > _______________________________________________ > Cerowrt-devel mailing list > Cerowrt-devel@lists.bufferbloat.net > https://lists.bufferbloat.net/listinfo/cerowrt-devel >