With our dear universal operating system set to switch over to systemd, I am 
just wondering if anybody has communicated that this breaks many ARM platforms 
with "typical" vendors who only care to ship a kernel they once hacked at 
product launch, and/or the one provided by CPU vendor who barely does much more 
than fork and abandon stuff on linaro.org.

Okay, Linaro isn't that bad, the expensive ARM chips are better supported than 
that and the sky isn't really falling. I actually really do like systemd 
features (though I think complaints about its monolithic approach are valid) 
and I currently maintain a systemd  build of my work for a candidate ARM target 
which mostly works well.

Except that critical out-of-tree kernel modules written for 3.0 need to be 
ported to a newer kernel, and undergo expensive re-validation. 

Eg. Congatec still actively maintains its fork of Freescale's fork of Linaro 
kernel 3.0.15: https://git.congatec.com/yocto/meta-fsl-arm-extra

Count how many of gumstix' offerings officially run Linux kernels >= 3.7 (hint: 
zero) http://www.gumstix.org/access-source-code.html

These vendor's products easily run Debian today but won't boot a Jessie image 
with systemd.

Not because the CPUs are unable but just the sheer fork-happy, hack&slash 
insanity of  software practice in the embedded space. Has this been 
communicated to the vote participants?

Or am I completely off-base here? Most of my career has been x86-only until 
recently.

Cheers
--
Paul Harvey

Sent from my android device.

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