Josselin Mouette <j...@debian.org> writes: > Which brings me to the other point: you are not going to decide what > people want to spend their time on. If systemd is selected as the > default, the systemd maintainers are not going to ask Steve to fix their > upgrades problem for them. And if upstart is selected, you will > certainly not ask members of the systemd community - from which Debian > would have just excluded itself - to fix Debian’s problems with not > having systemd.
I want to second this, because I agree with it completely. It is a core principle of Debian, featuring prominantly in the constitution: Nothing in this constitution imposes an obligation on anyone to do work for the Project. A person who does not want to do a task which has been delegated or assigned to them does not need to do it. However, they must not actively work against these rules and decisions properly made under them. I'm pretty sure that there are project resources available to integrate with systemd and that there are resources available to integrate with upstart (and there may be resources to integrate with both, although I really don't know). But those resources are probably going to be different in at least some cases. People are not, generally speaking, going to spend significant amount of time and effort working on source bases they don't like or in pursuit of goals that they don't agree with. This is one of the points I made in my writeup about the ecosystem. These are exactly the sort of resources that we will have to muster and maintain going forward in order to adopt usptart. Those resources may or may not be available in Debian today. I think that depends on how much surgery this will require to systemd and GNOME, and possibly later to KDE and to other packages, and what the ongoing maintenance burden will look like. Obviously, we can share work with Ubuntu in some of these areas, which reduces the demand for Debian-specific resources. But we certainly should not assume that either the current GNOME maintainers or the current systemd maintainers will be those resources. They may be, or they may decide to go work on something else; either way, it's entirely up to them, as it should be. We currently have multiple dedicated groups already in place in Debian who have clearly said they will do the work to integrate their components with systemd, and who have either not expressed an opinion or who have indicated they're not interested in integrating with upstart. And, I will also point out, we have other dedicated groups in Debian who are very concerned about the impact the adoption of systemd would have on *their* work and *their* projects. The degree to which this all should affect our decision-making process is limited. That's particularly true in this case, which is one of those decisions where, whatever we choose, some group of people in Debian who have put a ton of work into something they care about are going to be at least somewhat unhappy. That may be the systemd maintainers, the GNOME team, the Hurd porters, the kFreeBSD porters, the upstart maintainers, those who care deeply about tight Debian and Ubuntu integration, or any number of other groups. It will probably be several of those. Occasionally, there are decisions with sweeping consequences, and we have to have a method for making them. The TC is that method, which can then be overridden by General Resolution if warranted. However, it does affect how we should talk about these decisions, and it does affect the reality check on which approach has the most cost and on what resources are available. The TC doesn't get to order people to do work. We are not managers, and Debian is not a corporation. At most we can authorize NMUs or otherwise work around people who are preventing *other* people from doing work. And, as such, I really dislike seeing people make statements about what other specific people should be required to do in Debian. Making statements about what work one believes needs to be done is a different matter, but one should not assume that this work is going to be done by the people currently maintaining the relevant packages if they don't agree with it. Or if, for that matter, they get busy, they get sick, they have children, they retire, or they decide not to do that work for any other reason. For example, one possible outcome here is that whatever group cares about doing the upstart integration introduces a new systemd source package that's split and modified in such a way so as to work with upstart as the init system, and which conflicts with systemd as it is currently packaged. Furthermore, the TC is also not a code review body for Debian, nor is it our role to impose our personal asthetic or design views on the project. If any of us in the Debian project wanted to work on something with a dictated, top-down design, there are numerous other projects we could be working on, including several that offer wages for such effort. One of the core qualities of Debian is that we only dictate standards to people when they're necessary for integration, security, or to reduce impact on other core teams such as ftp-master, release, or security. Otherwise, we try to let people go about their work in the way that suits them best. This has various significant drawbacks, but the huge advantage that it makes working on Debian fun rather than a job. We have to make a decision here because Debian can only have one *default* init system, and all of our packages need to work with it. Maybe that decision necessarily involves some amount of central control over how integrations are done, including switching maintainers or introducing new packages in order to implement those integrations. But that's an unfortunate consequence of necessity, not an exciting opportunity to make everyone do everything the Right Way in an area where there are profound disagreements. I'm quite sure I'm not the only one who is regularly dictated design decisions in my regular job and has no interest in being subjected to the same thing in my hobby. Some amount of it is necessary in order to accomplish our shared goals of producing an integrated distribution. And some of it falls under reasonable accomodation; for example, I believe the solution that we arrived at with Network Manager was reasonable accomodation to the desires of other people in Debian, and continue to defend it. But on *exactly the same grounds*, I will defend introduction of shared library dependencies to daemons for integration with systemd. And we need to be very careful about what the boundaries of reasonable accomodation are. Major surgery to one's packages contrary to fundamental design goals that one has pursued in creating those packages is not reasonable accomodation, and it's something we should only pursue if the greater goal truly both warrants it and requires it, and with the full understanding that this will often mean that the current maintainers will step down and someone else will need to do the actual work. -- Russ Allbery (r...@debian.org) <http://www.eyrie.org/~eagle/> -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to debian-ctte-requ...@lists.debian.org with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact listmas...@lists.debian.org Archive: http://lists.debian.org/87zjng20xd....@windlord.stanford.edu