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Programming Linux

Lennart Poettering Announces the First Systemd Conference 416

jones_supa writes: Lennart Poettering, the creator of the controversial init system and service manager for Linux-based operating systems has announced the first systemd conference. The systemd.conf will take place November 5-7, in Berlin, Germany. systemd developers and hackers, DevOps professionals, and Linux distribution packagers will be able to attend various workshops, as well as to collaborate with their fellow developers and plan the future of the project. Attendees will also be able to participate in an extended hackfest event, as well as numerous presentations held by important names in the systemd project, including Poettering himself.
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Lennart Poettering Announces the First Systemd Conference

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  • by QuietLagoon ( 813062 ) on Sunday August 02, 2015 @11:25AM (#50234439)
    If a startup management subsystem needs its own conference, it is doing too much.
    • by TWX ( 665546 )
      Then how are devs supposed to get sponsored vacations out of their benefactors?

      I've noticed a trend- conferences that are paid-for by third-parties that sponsor the attendees, be they employers or charities or governments, are usually held in places where people want to go, while conferences that are paid for by the attendees themselves are usually held in less-desirable places or times (ie, winter in Minneapolis or summer in Phoenix). If the attendees are sponsored they go whole-hog, and if they pay th
      • Cold and full of Germans *hides*

      • I wonder which Berlin is in November? I've never been there myself.

        Berlin is always worth a visit. Late November in German cities are nice, since you will find small booths selling "Glühwein" and various food (like sausages) everywhere.
        While Berlin is nice in the summer with its biergartens, trees and sailing on the Spree, they have top notch museums too, like everything in the "museumsinsel/ Museum Island".

    • by EmperorArthur ( 1113223 ) on Sunday August 02, 2015 @11:40AM (#50234563)

      It does seem a bit much, but the systemd transition is a slow one. Many packages are still using init.d startup scripts, which means we can't take advantage of systemd's features with them.

      Systemd isn't really a startup management subsystem. It's a full blown service manager. It can be set, at the user's choice, to restart services when there's a problem. It can provide detailed logs from each service.

      The best part is the service descriptor files follow a standard. If all people did at this conference was convert package init scripts to systemd I would be ecstatic.

      • It does seem a bit much, but the systemd transition is a slow one. Many packages are still using init.d startup scripts, which means we can't take advantage of systemd's features with them.

        You should be able to take advantage of all of systemd's features whether the daemon is designed to be run from an init script or not, and even whether it is run from an init script or not. If not, there is either something deeply wrong with you (incompetence) or deeply wrong with systemd (poor design.)

      • by QuietLagoon ( 813062 ) on Sunday August 02, 2015 @12:41PM (#50234977)

        Systemd isn't really a startup management subsystem. It's a full blown service manager.

        OK...

        .
        If a service manager subsystem needs its own conference, it is doing too much.

        • by Barsteward ( 969998 ) on Sunday August 02, 2015 @01:11PM (#50235173)
          its the systemd project, not just the service management program "systemd" - from the announcement

          Call for Presentations We’d like to invite presentation proposals for systemd.conf 2015. We are looking for talks including, but not limited to the following topics: - Use Cases: systemd in today’s and tomorrow’s devices and applications, - systemd and containers, in the cloud and on servers, - systemd in distributions, - Embedded systemd, - systemd on the desktop, - Networking with systemd, - D-Bus and kdbus IPC systems, - and everything else related to systemd.
      • "If all people did at this conference was convert package init scripts to systemd I would be ecstatic." - that is happening all the time anyway because once they are all starting via systemd, the config files can be given to every distro that uses systemd because they will all work across all the distros unlike init scripts which you have to modify for that distros particular set up. You'll have to make noises to the individual companies that sell programs on linux to provide their own systemd config files
      • by DeVilla ( 4563 )

        The best part is the service descriptor files follow a standard. If all people did at this conference was convert package init scripts to systemd I would be ecstatic.

        Honest question (to who ever might know) ... are systemd service descriptor files distribution independent?

        People will tell you init scripts can be and can point you to standards for writing them, but in practice it usually doesn't work out too well. Not in a way that takes advantage of the various features of any given system. Distributions tend to be unique in various ways.

        I'm just wondering if systemd fixes that or if each distro is still going to have to roll their own because of distro unique conve

    • by bill_mcgonigle ( 4333 ) * on Sunday August 02, 2015 @01:00PM (#50235121) Homepage Journal

      I tried to register for it, but the system said no tickets were available. I sent in a note about that and got a response saying that ticket availability wasn't in the plans and that I was stupid for wanting one.

    • If a startup management subsystem needs its own conference, it is doing too much.

      Correction : startup management system backed , propagated and funded by Redhat

    • @QuietLagoon: "If a startup management subsystem needs its own conference, it is doing too much." ref [slashdot.org]

      That has to be the dumbest statement I have read on any technical forum - ever !

      I suppose if he didn't organize a conference, people like you would complain that he was dictating to Linux developers.
  • Is there a 'free speech zone' where we can go to protest?
    • I guess you could always offer to be a guest speaker and point out the errors of systemd
      • Re:Free speech zone (Score:5, Interesting)

        by phantomfive ( 622387 ) on Sunday August 02, 2015 @12:47PM (#50235023) Journal
        They will not invite someone to speak on that, but [slashdot.org] that [slashdot.org] is [slashdot.org] something [slashdot.org] I'm [slashdot.org] working [slashdot.org] on [slashdot.org].

        In brief, the good:
        * Systemd makes it easier for distro maintainers to write startup scripts, which is something a lot of them wanted.

        The bad:
        * Poor understanding of interfaces by the lead developers.
        * Poor understanding of portability by the lead developers.
        * Poor understanding of separation of concerns.
        * Scope creep (there is no reason Gnome should depend on systemd).
        * Binary files are a symptom of idiocy......more specifically, binary/text is not something that should be decided by the init system.
        • by Peter H.S. ( 38077 ) on Sunday August 02, 2015 @01:38PM (#50235333) Homepage

          >* Scope creep (there is no reason Gnome should depend on systemd).

          Gnome doesn't depend on systemd as such, but on the systemd-logind API. Until recently (perhaps it still does) it also supported the old ConsolKit API as alternative even though CK had been dead for +1½ year with no upstream bug fixing or security support, and no one bothered to maintain it anyway.

          The problem seems to be that the systemd-opponents really don't understand how Open Source software works and being developed, something that requires coordination, and positive contributions with either code, documentation, or money.

          Claiming that the systemd developers are incompetent and doesn't understand software development will get you nowhere. You have to employ your superior knowledge into actual competing projects in order to be taken seriously. But that is the problem isn't it? The total lack of effort by the systemd-opponents to actually create something useful.

          • Yes it does [slashdot.org]. You can't separate logind from systemd (although that would be good software engineering, if they were separable). The systemd-logind API is deeply integrated into systemd. It shouldn't be, but it is.

            The problem seems to be that the systemd-opponents really don't understand how Open Source software works and being developed, something that requires coordination, and positive contributions with either code, documentation, or money.

            The problem seems to be that you didn't read any of my posts that I linked to earlier. From what you've written, it doesn't even seem like you understand systemd very well. Yet somehow you are a huge proponent of systemd. I don't know. What do you like about it? That's a serious question.

            • Yes it does [slashdot.org]. You can't separate logind from systemd (although that would be good software engineering, if they were separable). The systemd-logind API is deeply integrated into systemd. It shouldn't be, but it is.

              You are misinformed. CK2 and systemd-shim are alternative implementations of the systemd-logind API (or at least the subset of the API Gnome/KDE actually need). The CK2 developers abandoned the old CK API in favor of the systemd API, simply because the systemd-logind API developed by Lennart Poettering is much nicer

              There are actual good technical reasons why systemd is made like it is and why systemd-logind is part of the systemd project. You simply can't get the same features such as multi-seat without suc

              • You simply can't get the same features such as multi-seat without such integration.

                There was multi-seat X before there was systemd. How can it be that you can't have multi-seat without such integration?

              • Re:Free speech zone (Score:4, Interesting)

                by phantomfive ( 622387 ) on Sunday August 02, 2015 @02:35PM (#50235687) Journal

                There are actual good technical reasons why systemd is made like it is and why systemd-logind is part of the systemd project.

                There are no good technical reasons. Having a window manager depend on a particular startup manager is poor design, there's no way around that.

                You are misinformed. CK2 and systemd-shim are alternative implementations of the systemd-logind API (or at least the subset of the API Gnome/KDE actually need).

                I discuss that here [slashdot.org]. If you think I am misinformed, I will look into it more deeply.

        • "Systemd makes it easier for distro maintainers to write startup scripts, which is something a lot of them wanted" - don't you mean configuration files like unit, target and service files? Why would they be using startup scripts, one of the main points was to get rid of scripts.

          "Poor understanding of interfaces by the lead developers." - thats a new one - where did you get that from, give us some backup to see what you mean.
          "Poor understanding of portability by the lead developers." - portable to where?
  • Two utilities that are much more important then systemD. I really try to. if not like systemd, at least get along with it. yet the more time goes by the more negative my opinion gets. It really reminds me off all the problems we went through with pulseaudio.
  • by ArcadeMan ( 2766669 ) on Sunday August 02, 2015 @12:30PM (#50234901)

    We are systemd. Lower your MBR protection and surrender your init system. We will add your daemons, libraries, and utilities to our own. Your code will adapt to service us. Resistance is futile.

  • by loony ( 37622 ) on Sunday August 02, 2015 @12:33PM (#50234927)

    all we need is a nice little bomb... We know when and where they will be - take out their leaders and we can move on to something useful!

  • The comments on here, a classic example of just how badly slashdot has gone to the shits ..
    • The comments on here, a classic example of just how badly slashdot has gone to the shits ..

      We thank you for your ironically illustrative contribution. Sadly, we cannot pay you for your efforts, except in raspberries.

  • It seems to me that a systemd conference wouldn't be much different from a BDSM convention.

  • That's like naming a software project OpenOffice.org. It's just asking for some level of confusion just to be cute (okay, oo.org was an attempt to alleviate confusion about .org vs .com domain name, but you get my drift). Call it what it is: the Great systemd Con.
  • Brings new users to FreeBSD and in a while the developers will have figured out something similar for FreeBSD that actually works.
  • by sjukfan ( 2730687 ) on Sunday August 02, 2015 @05:58PM (#50236711)
    I admit I enjoy wordplay like systemd.conf, but since systemd uses binary log files shouldn't the conference be called systemd.bin?
  • by BlackPignouf ( 1017012 ) on Monday August 03, 2015 @04:36PM (#50243867)

    Nuke it from orbit, it's the only way to be sure!

You know you've landed gear-up when it takes full power to taxi.

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