On Thu, 27 Dec 2012 17:38:15 -0600
Canek Peláez Valdés <can...@gmail.com> wrote:

> In SysV, I can *write* the daemon in the init script.
> In *that* sense, the init system tells the daemon how to do things,

Please explain, sure there is the environment that tells a daemon what
to do. No shell can tell a c daemon like sshd how to drop priviledges
or use systrace but it could do these things for it in a more fine
grained manner before it tries and fails itself or if the daemon
wishes it to like monit. It's still not telling how but duplicating or
removing the need. That's just a bonus that applies to all init
systems because shell is so powerful on unix.

Reply via email to