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I meant to say udev and the original implementations of hal, hotplug, and devfs were supported by the kernel for hardware device management, not exactly part of the kernel. Ah! Yes, GazL I meant devfs. I forgot devfs had been phased out and replaced with udev's implementation of devtmpfs. I wonder if Linus has looked into the non-systemd udev fork yet? |
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Linus may call Kay a "two-faced lying weasel", but submitted a patch that essentially implements Kay's suggestion. Those high caliber developers know each other for many years and will settle issues without our advices. Dog barks, caravan is moving. Quote:
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Interesting development. Hope this gets off the ground:
http://linux.slashdot.org/story/12/1...pers-fork-udev |
GazL, you beat me to it--I was going to start another thread, but you dug up this one.
Anyway, I wonder if Pat and the gang (along with the rest of us?) should throw our hat behind the Gentoo effort and actually do real support/coding behind it? The more distros get behind it, the better it should work, and maybe some of the nagging problems with udev can even be fixed! |
I hope the fork does go forward and gets adopted by others besides gentoo. However, Kay Sievers seems to have commit privileges which may not be good -since he's the one turned udev over to Lennart Poettering. Also, the new fork seems to follow the upstream changes pretty closely -I wonder what they will do when changes come in which cause new breakages. I'm quite sure that the upstream will, at some point, seriously break compatibility with older versions -which is one of the main problems which has plagued udev all along.
For me, Kay Sievers has joined the shortlist of our greatest villains, behind Ulrich Drepper, Jörg Schilling and Greg Kroah-Hartmann (who created udev and it's traditional lack of both foresight and hindsight). Lennart Poettering is new to the list but is rising fast in the ranks... |
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Gentoo developers are also unhappy with udev: http://www.phoronix.com/scan.php?pag...tem&px=MTIzMDU
Sorry, Martinus2u posted the link first :) |
Something _is_ going to happen, that we can be certain of, but what? If things continue there will be all sorts of trouble in in big parts of the free software community not related to Linux, but probably also in more specialized cases of Linux far from desktop use.
Somehow, i do not know why yet, i have some ugly feel that this systemd mess can be related to some draconian implementation of secure boot, but that is just some crazy feeling i have. |
It seems, that forcing stuff on users is the new FreeDesktop development culture. They forget, that users can leave the GNOME/Pulseaudio/Systemd ecosystem and go for commercial vendors. And without users the remaining hardware vendors will drop support. At the end of the day, the developers sit on their "works perfect for me" implementation, which runs only on a virtual machine. Go figure!
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udev seems to work reasonably well for me. Aside from that restart I do after boot and logging in to get it back down to one entry in the ps tree. And that, I have less common hardware thing. As I configure this device manually with less of a clue than the developer. Is it me or was MAKEDEV and mknod simpler to understand back in the day? At least it's being looked at and possible solutions are being explored.
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Udev in Slackware works fine for me now, although it's mainly because of Pat careful choice of udev release. If anything goes wrong with udev in future, we'll see. I would be surprised if anyone revived HAL and other "deprecated" (but still working) tools, nevertheless eudev seems to be good choice for near future. |
Interesting - I subscribed to the mailing list just to watch and follow along.
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Currently I'm testing a rollback of Slackware 14.0 to udev 165 from 13.37. This has the advantage, that /run can go away too.
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