Hi, since this is the time to submit arguments before the CTTE can discuss things internally and hopefully reach a decision, I’d like to say a few words.
It won’t be a surprise if I say systemd should be the default init systems for the Linux architectures for jessie and, unless another solution arises, the only supported option for jessie+1. I say this as a systems engineer, because systemd is great software. I’m not going to list all systemd features, but there are many of them I want to see on my production servers. In addition, the command-line interface is awesome, and the unit file description is straightforward. I say this as a package maintainer, too. Systemd is becoming a de facto standard in Linux distributions (at least Fedora, SuSE and Arch), and is getting excellent upstream support in many packages. So far, only Gentoo uses OpenRC (and it doesn’t have most of the features I’d like to have), and only Ubuntu uses Upstart. Therefore using OpenRC would mean maintaining many patches on our own, and using Upstart would mean that our upstream would become Ubuntu. As a side note, I think upstart’s CLA dismisses it as software of choice for our core system. I know it’s not the only important piece of software in Debian with a CLA. I still stand on this point. I have experienced a real world CUPS nightmare because of Apple’s CLA, and I would be all for ditching CUPS as default too if we had a decent alternative. Finally, I say this as one of the GNOME packages’ maintainers. GNOME in jessie will need systemd as the init system to work with all its features, just like it needs the network configuration to be handled by NetworkManager. While it is (and can remain) possible, just like in the NM case, to install it without systemd and lose functionality, I think it is unreasonable to ask for a default GNOME installation without it. Some people have argued this functionality can be reimplemented on top of Upstart or OpenRC. These people should be ready to show the code and to commit on maintaining it in the long term before it can be considered as a possible alternative. Finally, a word about kFreeBSD. I know systemd and upstart have not been ported to kFreeBSD (and despite claims that upstart developers would accept patches, so far they don’t exist). However, we are talking about a major feature leap for Linux, and having kFreeBSD interfere in the decision would be unfair to Linux users. My gut feeling is that, despite the original enthusiasm I shared, kFreeBSD was branded a release architecture too soon, or at least for a too broad set of packages. Most packages have never been tested on non-linux, and a large portion of those does not work. A possible approach would be to restrict these architectures to a defined set of packages and maintain OpenRC or insserv scripts for these packages. In all cases, this should be worked on after reaching a decision for the Linux init system. Thanks for reading, -- .''`. Josselin Mouette : :' : `. `' `- -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to debian-bugs-dist-requ...@lists.debian.org with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact listmas...@lists.debian.org