Sujet : Re: Yet Another New systemd Feature
De : ff (at) *nospam* linux.rocks (Farley Flud)
Groupes : comp.os.linux.miscDate : 06. May 2024, 21:43:59
Autres entêtes
Organisation : UsenetExpress - www.usenetexpress.com
Message-ID : <17ccfdd2b9104063$29860$291924$802601b3@news.usenetexpress.com>
References : 1 2 3
On Mon, 6 May 2024 09:32:07 +0100, Andy Burns wrote:
Nowadays you have to go out of your way to not be reliant on systemd,
which already has the ability to launch processes as specific users,
without cludgy setuid/sudo, so why not re-use it ...
Personally I'm more of a su user than sudo user, though I realise that
relies on trusting everyone who knows the root password, we managed on
every *nix box I was involved with.
>
Yes. You are just another totally ignorant GNU/Linux user and it is
people like you that have allowed systemd to infiltrate as far as it
has.
Myself, for my minimalist standalone workstation, I run without systemd
and, moreover, I run always as ROOT.
This latter fact alone will be enough to send all the GNU/Linux ignoramuses
into "panty twist" mode, but for those TRUE GNU/LINUX EXPERTS this
is nothing whatsoever unusual.
The truth about systemd is that, for standalone workstations, systemd
is both totally unnecessary and a total encumbrance.
Systemd persists only, and emphatically ONLY, because the majority
of GNU/Linux users are helpless lackeys to their chosen distro.
Please. Don't bother responding. I am well aware and sick of
all your acquiescent and ignoramus responses.