Re: [arch-general] How to disable systemd-tmpfiles-clean.timer

2014-05-10 Thread Christos Nouskas
On 9 May 2014 00:22, Daniel Micay danielmi...@gmail.com wrote:

 You already made it quite personal by promoting FUD with gems like this:

 systemd's team is noticeably chauvinistic

Good grace, you pasted a quote I didn't make and made it appear as
mine or as if I approved it, whilst I was very careful about which
facts I *actually* agree with and quoted from the aforementioned site.

Furthermore, you kept implying I made or endorsed that quote in all
your subsequent posts, making it your chief argument. What kind of
people do that? [0]


 Do you think Tom and Dave are chauvanistic?

I've been an Archer since 2004 and I've never attacked anyone in our
lists or the boards. It's not polite and it's not constructive. I also
made it very very clear in my first post that I wasn't ranting against
people. But sucking up to authority was always a fast way to the top,
eh?


To answer my own question [0]: those who end up in my
Trolls-Slanderers-Bigots-Fanatics gmail trash filters. You match on
all of them. Welcome and goodnight.


-- 
X
https://aur.archlinux.org/packages/?SeB=mK=nous
http://tiny.cc/linux-pf


Re: [arch-general] How to disable systemd-tmpfiles-clean.timer

2014-05-09 Thread Mark Lee
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA256

On 05/09/2014 01:41 AM, Daniel Micay wrote:
 On 09/05/14 01:29 AM, Mark Lee wrote:

 To Daniel,

 I'm pointing out that respect for people shouldn't affect technical
 skepticism. People can rant against whomever they want as long as it has
 technical criticism (at least on this mailing list). 
 
 Accusing the developers of bad faith and spreading misinformation about
 the project is not technical skepticism. I'll quote one of my earlier
 statements:
 
 Bashing an open-source project and spreading FUD about it is always an
 attack on the open-source community, whether it's GNOME, systemd, KDE,
 PHP, or something else. It's one thing to take a rational look at a
 project and criticize it, and quite another to promote content
 accusing the developers of having bad faith without *any* evidence.
 
 Hence, don't make anything personal.

 Regards,
 Mark
 
 You're implying that I've made it personal, but I don't think I've done
 any such thing. What have I said that you think is venturing into the
 land of a personal attack?
 

To Daniel,

Regarding, your personal attack. I inferred a personal attack when you
claimed that the Arch developers were also SystemD developers and were
well respected. It seemed to me like you were peer pressuring the fellow
into withdrawing the issue by belittling his credentials in comparison
to a community and powerful developers. This looked like a David vs.
Goliath situation to me; we shouldn't ever be forcing Archers with
questions in this situation. The opinion of a user should be just as
valuable as the opinion of a developer.

There are right ways to handle things and wrong ways. The Archer  had a
technical issue and an opinion. Solving the technical issue is more
important. We can usually just ignore the opinion. This may seem
hypocritical that I'm typing this (since this doesn't solve the issue
for the Archer), so it'll be the last response I make regarding a
person's opinionated response (at least on this thread).

With that in mind, I hope the issue's solved for the Archer.

Regards,
Mark
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Re: [arch-general] How to disable systemd-tmpfiles-clean.timer

2014-05-09 Thread Daniel Micay
On 09/05/14 02:02 AM, Mark Lee wrote:
 On 05/09/2014 01:41 AM, Daniel Micay wrote:
 On 09/05/14 01:29 AM, Mark Lee wrote:

 To Daniel,

 I'm pointing out that respect for people shouldn't affect technical
 skepticism. People can rant against whomever they want as long as it has
 technical criticism (at least on this mailing list). 
 
 Accusing the developers of bad faith and spreading misinformation about
 the project is not technical skepticism. I'll quote one of my earlier
 statements:
 
 Bashing an open-source project and spreading FUD about it is always an
 attack on the open-source community, whether it's GNOME, systemd, KDE,
 PHP, or something else. It's one thing to take a rational look at a
 project and criticize it, and quite another to promote content
 accusing the developers of having bad faith without *any* evidence.
 
 Hence, don't make anything personal.

 Regards,
 Mark
 
 You're implying that I've made it personal, but I don't think I've done
 any such thing. What have I said that you think is venturing into the
 land of a personal attack?
 
 
 To Daniel,
 
 Regarding, your personal attack. I inferred a personal attack when you
 claimed that the Arch developers were also SystemD developers and were
 well respected. It seemed to me like you were peer pressuring the fellow
 into withdrawing the issue by belittling his credentials in comparison
 to a community and powerful developers. This looked like a David vs.
 Goliath situation to me; we shouldn't ever be forcing Archers with
 questions in this situation. The opinion of a user should be just as
 valuable as the opinion of a developer.

Calling the systemd developers chauvanistic and claiming they have bad
faith is a personal attack. There was no issue raised by the person I'm
replying to, only flaming and a link to more flamebait containing actual
personal attacks and outright lies.

They claimed attacking systemd was not attacking the Arch community, and
I clearly quoted that part of their message and responded to it by
stating that since prominent members of the community (including
developers) are systemd developers, attacking the systemd developers
*is* attacking the Arch developers.

I get the impression that you only skimmed over the conversation or read
the last few messages, because you seem to be missing the context.

 There are right ways to handle things and wrong ways. The Archer  had a
 technical issue and an opinion. Solving the technical issue is more
 important. We can usually just ignore the opinion. This may seem
 hypocritical that I'm typing this (since this doesn't solve the issue
 for the Archer), so it'll be the last response I make regarding a
 person's opinionated response (at least on this thread).
 
 With that in mind, I hope the issue's solved for the Archer.
 
 Regards,
 Mark

The person I responded to is not the one asking a technical question.

Here is the first message they sent to the list:

https://mailman.archlinux.org/pipermail/arch-general/2014-May/036206.html

It's not the original post with the technical issue. It's someone taking
the time to link to FUD (ad hominem attacks on the systemd developers,
hollow rhetoric and misinformation) because there was a post about
systemd. Have you read the content of the link?



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Re: [arch-general] How to disable systemd-tmpfiles-clean.timer

2014-05-08 Thread Savyasachee Jha
On Thu, May 8, 2014 at 3:43 PM, Olivier Langlois 
oliv...@olivierlanglois.net wrote:

 Since a recent update (I have first noticed a couple of weeks ago this
 new systemd enhancement), systemd started to automatically clean /tmp
 directory daily. This is not something that I like as I prefer to decide
 when to clean up and to manually perform the clean up.

 I have tried

 systemctl stop systemd-tmpfiles-clean.timer
 systemctl disable systemd-tmpfiles-clean.timer

 The disabling apparently did not survived a reboot and the undesired
 systemd service came back.

 I guess that I could mess with tmpfiles-clean config file but I am just
 not interested in the service at all. What is the sure way method to
 disable it for good?

 thank you,



Try:

systemctl mask systemd-tmpfiles-clean.timer

Should definitely work.

-- 
Savyasachee Jha

*Aerodynamics is for people whodon't know how to build engines.*


Re: [arch-general] How to disable systemd-tmpfiles-clean.timer

2014-05-08 Thread Christos Nouskas
On 8 May 2014 09:43, Olivier Langlois oliv...@olivierlanglois.net wrote:
 Since a recent update (I have first noticed a couple of weeks ago this
 new systemd enhancement), systemd started to automatically clean /tmp
 directory daily. This is not something that I like as I prefer to decide
 when to clean up and to manually perform the clean up.

I'm sorry I don't have a solution to your problem (which is also mine
as I tend to keep a lot of files in /tmp...) but the invasiveness of
systemd is just outrageous and, allow me to say, not KISS at all, i.e.
do one thing and do it well [0]. First it was udev, next dbus, then
journal logs, then timers, now automatic /tmp cleaning. What's next,
mandatory reboot on each update?

This is not a rant against Arch or its devs and community, but against
systemd; the sad facts speak for themselves.

[0] http://boycottsystemd.org/


-- 
X
https://aur.archlinux.org/packages/?SeB=mK=nous
http://tiny.cc/linux-pf


Re: [arch-general] How to disable systemd-tmpfiles-clean.timer

2014-05-08 Thread Lukas Jirkovsky
On Thu, May 8, 2014 at 9:46 AM, Christos Nouskas n...@archlinux.us wrote:
 On 8 May 2014 09:43, Olivier Langlois oliv...@olivierlanglois.net wrote:
 Since a recent update (I have first noticed a couple of weeks ago this
 new systemd enhancement), systemd started to automatically clean /tmp
 directory daily. This is not something that I like as I prefer to decide
 when to clean up and to manually perform the clean up.

 I'm sorry I don't have a solution to your problem (which is also mine
 as I tend to keep a lot of files in /tmp...) but the invasiveness of
 systemd is just outrageous and, allow me to say, not KISS at all, i.e.
 do one thing and do it well [0]. First it was udev, next dbus, then
 journal logs, then timers, now automatic /tmp cleaning. What's next,
 mandatory reboot on each update?

 This is not a rant against Arch or its devs and community, but against
 systemd; the sad facts speak for themselves.

 [0] http://boycottsystemd.org/


 --
 X
 https://aur.archlinux.org/packages/?SeB=mK=nous
 http://tiny.cc/linux-pf

Please don't start another systemd flamewar. And BTW, automatic /tmp
cleaning was there since the beginning.


Re: [arch-general] How to disable systemd-tmpfiles-clean.timer

2014-05-08 Thread Paul Gideon Dann
On Thursday 08 May 2014 09:53:41 Lukas Jirkovsky wrote:
 On Thu, May 8, 2014 at 9:46 AM, Christos Nouskas n...@archlinux.us wrote:
  On 8 May 2014 09:43, Olivier Langlois oliv...@olivierlanglois.net wrote:
  Since a recent update (I have first noticed a couple of weeks ago this
  new systemd enhancement), systemd started to automatically clean /tmp
  directory daily. This is not something that I like as I prefer to decide
  when to clean up and to manually perform the clean up.

The /tmp directory is intended for temporary files, after all. If you need them 
to stick around, I'd 
recommend using /var/tmp. But yeah, masking the unit file should solve this for 
you, I think.

  I'm sorry I don't have a solution to your problem (which is also mine
  as I tend to keep a lot of files in /tmp...) but the invasiveness of
  systemd is just outrageous and, allow me to say, not KISS at all, i.e.
  do one thing and do it well [0]. First it was udev, next dbus, then
  journal logs, then timers, now automatic /tmp cleaning. What's next,
  mandatory reboot on each update?

For those of us that run systems that are up for months at a time between 
reboots, relying on a 
reboot to clean out the cruft that accumulates in /tmp is not too elegant.

Bear in mind that systemd itself is a set of separate tools, each performing 
one job and 
performing it well, in the UNIX tradition. It just so happens that the task 
that the systemd init 
daemon does is to manage and run many unit files (each doing one thing and 
doing it well), 
resulting in a well-managed system, in the UNIX tradition.

Paul


Re: [arch-general] How to disable systemd-tmpfiles-clean.timer

2014-05-08 Thread LANGLOIS Olivier PIS -EXT
 -Original Message-
 From: arch-general [mailto:arch-general-boun...@archlinux.org] On Behalf
 Of Lukas Jirkovsky
 Sent: Thursday, May 08, 2014 3:54 AM

 Please don't start another systemd flamewar. And BTW, automatic /tmp
 cleaning was there since the beginning.

I agree to not start a flamewar but hopefully systemd devs do not consider 
their SW as perfect and are looking to improve it by taking into consideration 
the userbase complains about it.

Maybe automatic /tmp cleaning was there since the beginning but it appears that 
it never worked on my systems until very recently after using ArchLinux for 
over 2 years.

 -Original Message-
 From: arch-general [mailto:arch-general-boun...@archlinux.org] On Behalf
 Of Paul Gideon Dann
 Sent: Thursday, May 08, 2014 5:26 AM

 On Thursday 08 May 2014 09:53:41 Lukas Jirkovsky wrote:
  On Thu, May 8, 2014 at 9:46 AM, Christos Nouskas n...@archlinux.us
 wrote:
   On 8 May 2014 09:43, Olivier Langlois oliv...@olivierlanglois.net wrote:
   Since a recent update (I have first noticed a couple of weeks ago
   this new systemd enhancement), systemd started to automatically
   clean /tmp directory daily. This is not something that I like as I
   prefer to decide when to clean up and to manually perform the clean
 up.

 The /tmp directory is intended for temporary files, after all. If you need 
 them
 to stick around, I'd recommend using /var/tmp. But yeah, masking the unit
 file should solve this for you, I think.

I was forecasting that this comment would come when I wrote the original 
request. While I agree with what you say, I think that it is reasonable to let 
the user have the control over when it is cleaned. Without denaturing the /tmp 
folder, I'm using it to experiment patches on some packages or launch 
computation and store results into /tmp to return back at them the next 
morning. I have been a bit shocked to find out one morning that my files have 
been deleted by my system. IMHO, this goes against the rule of least surprise 
which is a pillar of the unix philosophy.

I understand that for some sysadmins it might be convenient to have an 
automatic cleanup but IMHO they should explicitly set it up. I am not too sure 
that this is a good default behavior.

That being said, I'll try to mask the service. Thank you very much for your 
replies.

Greetings,
Olivier

Please ignore the confidentiality notice below.
It is automatically added without my consent.


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Re: [arch-general] How to disable systemd-tmpfiles-clean.timer

2014-05-08 Thread Leonid Isaev
Hi,

On Thu, 08 May 2014 02:43:57 -0400
Olivier Langlois oliv...@olivierlanglois.net wrote:

 Since a recent update (I have first noticed a couple of weeks ago this
 new systemd enhancement), systemd started to automatically clean /tmp
 directory daily. This is not something that I like as I prefer to decide
 when to clean up and to manually perform the clean up.
 
 I have tried
 
 systemctl stop systemd-tmpfiles-clean.timer
 systemctl disable systemd-tmpfiles-clean.timer
 
 The disabling apparently did not survived a reboot and the undesired
 systemd service came back.
 
 I guess that I could mess with tmpfiles-clean config file but I am just
 not interested in the service at all. What is the sure way method to
 disable it for good?

systemd-tmpfiles-clean does more that just removing stuff from /tmp. So
changing the config is the only way to go. Just
copy /usr/lib/tmpfiles.d/tmp.conf to /etc/tmpfiles.d/ and modify it as you
like...

Cheers,
-- 
Leonid Isaev
GPG fingerprints: DA92 034D B4A8 EC51 7EA6  20DF 9291 EE8A 043C B8C4
  C0DF 20D0 C075 C3F1 E1BE  775A A7AE F6CB 164B 5A6D


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Re: [arch-general] How to disable systemd-tmpfiles-clean.timer

2014-05-08 Thread Daniel Micay
On 08/05/14 11:44 AM, LANGLOIS Olivier PIS -EXT wrote:
 -Original Message-
 From: arch-general [mailto:arch-general-boun...@archlinux.org] On Behalf
 Of Lukas Jirkovsky
 Sent: Thursday, May 08, 2014 3:54 AM

 Please don't start another systemd flamewar. And BTW, automatic /tmp
 cleaning was there since the beginning.
 
 I agree to not start a flamewar but hopefully systemd devs do not consider 
 their SW as perfect and are looking to improve it by taking into 
 consideration the userbase complains about it.
 
 Maybe automatic /tmp cleaning was there since the beginning but it appears 
 that it never worked on my systems until very recently after using ArchLinux 
 for over 2 years.

Several of the Arch developers are systemd developers, so it's not like
you're talking about a group of outsiders here. The /tmp cleaning
doesn't delete recently touched files (10 days), so perhaps you've never
noticed it before.

 -Original Message-
 From: arch-general [mailto:arch-general-boun...@archlinux.org] On Behalf
 Of Paul Gideon Dann
 Sent: Thursday, May 08, 2014 5:26 AM

 On Thursday 08 May 2014 09:53:41 Lukas Jirkovsky wrote:
 On Thu, May 8, 2014 at 9:46 AM, Christos Nouskas n...@archlinux.us
 wrote:
 On 8 May 2014 09:43, Olivier Langlois oliv...@olivierlanglois.net wrote:
 Since a recent update (I have first noticed a couple of weeks ago
 this new systemd enhancement), systemd started to automatically
 clean /tmp directory daily. This is not something that I like as I
 prefer to decide when to clean up and to manually perform the clean
 up.

 The /tmp directory is intended for temporary files, after all. If you need 
 them
 to stick around, I'd recommend using /var/tmp. But yeah, masking the unit
 file should solve this for you, I think.
 
 I was forecasting that this comment would come when I wrote the original 
 request. While I agree with what you say, I think that it is reasonable to 
 let the user have the control over when it is cleaned. Without denaturing the 
 /tmp folder, I'm using it to experiment patches on some packages or launch 
 computation and store results into /tmp to return back at them the next 
 morning. I have been a bit shocked to find out one morning that my files have 
 been deleted by my system. IMHO, this goes against the rule of least surprise 
 which is a pillar of the unix philosophy.

Use your home directory. /tmp is a dangerous place since it's a shared,
world-writable ephemeral directory. The only things that are stored
there are temporary files used by currently open applications. In most
cases, $XDG_RUNTIME_DIR is a better choice (sockets, fifos, etc.).

 I understand that for some sysadmins it might be convenient to have an 
 automatic cleanup but IMHO they should explicitly set it up. I am not too 
 sure that this is a good default behavior.

It's good default behaviour, as long as you aren't abusing /tmp for
stuff it's not meant for.

 That being said, I'll try to mask the service. Thank you very much for your 
 replies.

You can override the /usr/lib/tmpfiles.d/tmp.conf file in
/etc/tmpfiles.d and get rid of the cleaning.



signature.asc
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Re: [arch-general] How to disable systemd-tmpfiles-clean.timer

2014-05-08 Thread Alessandro Doro
On Thu, May 08, 2014 at 03:44:51PM +, LANGLOIS Olivier PIS -EXT wrote:
 I was forecasting that this comment would come when I wrote the
 original request. While I agree with what you say, I think that it is
 reasonable to let the user have the control over when it is cleaned.
 Without denaturing the /tmp folder, I'm using it to experiment patches
 on some packages or launch computation and store results into /tmp to
 return back at them the next morning. I have been a bit shocked to
 find out one morning that my files have been deleted by my system.
 IMHO, this goes against the rule of least surprise which is a pillar
 of the unix philosophy.

You should create a temporary directory under /tmp for your experiment.
Put a file in /etc/tmpfiles.d/mydir.conf with this content:
d /tmp/mydirectory mode uid gid

and work under that directory; systemd won't clean it.
For more information:
$ man 5 tmpfiles.d



Re: [arch-general] How to disable systemd-tmpfiles-clean.timer

2014-05-08 Thread Daniel Micay
On 08/05/14 03:46 AM, Christos Nouskas wrote:
 On 8 May 2014 09:43, Olivier Langlois oliv...@olivierlanglois.net wrote:
 Since a recent update (I have first noticed a couple of weeks ago this
 new systemd enhancement), systemd started to automatically clean /tmp
 directory daily. This is not something that I like as I prefer to decide
 when to clean up and to manually perform the clean up.
 
 I'm sorry I don't have a solution to your problem (which is also mine
 as I tend to keep a lot of files in /tmp...) but the invasiveness of
 systemd is just outrageous and, allow me to say, not KISS at all, i.e.
 do one thing and do it well [0]. First it was udev, next dbus, then
 journal logs, then timers, now automatic /tmp cleaning. What's next,
 mandatory reboot on each update?

The Arch developers decided to use it for timer units and logs, not
anyone else. It's still the same udev it always was, and dbus is moving
into the kernel, not systemd (systemd interacts with it as a client and
provides a compatibility layer for yet to be updated processes).

I guess you'll be upset that Tom (one of the Arch developers) wrote
systemd-networkd. You'll probably also be upset that there's going to be
a simple systemd-console from the kmscon developer (who is an Arch user)
and a systemd-timesyncd for basic NTP clients not needing a full blown
server with complicated RTC handling.

Everyone else will continue on with their lives, because they realize
that there's nothing wrong with maintaining more than one binary/library
under one version control repository.

 This is not a rant against Arch or its devs and community, but against
 systemd; the sad facts speak for themselves.

This is a rant against the Arch devs and the Arch community. Several of
the developers and several people involved with the community are
systemd developers, and there is certainly consensus among the Arch
developers and trusted users to use systemd.

 [0] http://boycottsystemd.org/

There are no facts there. I already responded to this FUD on reddit:
http://www.reddit.com/r/archlinux/comments/24zj10/what_are_the_benefits_of_partitioning_disk_space/chcao5u



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Re: [arch-general] How to disable systemd-tmpfiles-clean.timer

2014-05-08 Thread Nowaker

This is not a rant against Arch or its devs and community, but against
systemd; the sad facts speak for themselves.



This is a rant against the Arch devs and the Arch community. Several of
the developers and several people involved with the community are
systemd developers, and there is certainly consensus among the Arch

 developers and trusted users to use systemd.

This sounds really bad. Ranting against systemd should never be taken as 
ranting against Arch in general or some specific Arch developers. After 
all, Arch Linux is a Linux distribution, not a systemd distribution. ;) 
Systemd was chosen for some important reasons, I support this decision, 
but it shouldn't be considered a holy grail. The holy grail is pacman, 
and anyone who rants against pacman rants against Arch devs and 
community! ;-)


--
Kind regards,
Damian Nowak
StratusHost
www.AtlasHost.eu


Re: [arch-general] How to disable systemd-tmpfiles-clean.timer

2014-05-08 Thread Daniel Micay
On 08/05/14 05:01 PM, Nowaker wrote:
 This is not a rant against Arch or its devs and community, but against
 systemd; the sad facts speak for themselves.
 
 This is a rant against the Arch devs and the Arch community. Several of
 the developers and several people involved with the community are
 systemd developers, and there is certainly consensus among the Arch
 developers and trusted users to use systemd.
 
 This sounds really bad. Ranting against systemd should never be taken as
 ranting against Arch in general or some specific Arch developers. After
 all, Arch Linux is a Linux distribution, not a systemd distribution. ;)
 Systemd was chosen for some important reasons, I support this decision,
 but it shouldn't be considered a holy grail. The holy grail is pacman,
 and anyone who rants against pacman rants against Arch devs and
 community! ;-)

Some of the Arch developers are pacman developers, and others are
systemd developers. Both projects are part of the base install and are a
significant part of the distributions flavour. The msys2 project uses
pacman on Windows, so it's not really any more specific to Arch than
systemd.

Bashing an open-source project and spreading FUD about it is always an
attack on the open-source community, whether it's GNOME, systemd, KDE,
PHP, or something else. It's one thing to take a rational look at a
project and criticize it, and quite another to promote content accusing
the developers of having bad faith without *any* evidence.



signature.asc
Description: OpenPGP digital signature


Re: [arch-general] How to disable systemd-tmpfiles-clean.timer

2014-05-08 Thread Christos Nouskas
 I guess you'll be upset that Tom (one of the Arch developers) wrote
 systemd-networkd.

You guess wrong.

 You'll probably also be upset that there's going to be
 a simple systemd-console from the kmscon developer (who is an Arch user)
 and a systemd-timesyncd for basic NTP clients not needing a full blown
 server with complicated RTC handling.

Again wrong. Unless they're enabled by default.

 Everyone else will continue on with their lives, because they realize
 that there's nothing wrong with maintaining more than one binary/library
 under one version control repository.

Don't escalate and don't make it personal. You're just guessing wrong;
I don't mind running systemd, unless it decides what's best for me
without asking me. Clearing /tmp is one of those annoying things.

I've also been annoyed by the fact that I have a PC that won't boot
with systemd198-2, because systemd can't mount /usr/local (which is
empty).

On the other hand I do love the _netdev  x-systemd.automount
directives in /etc/fstab.

 This is a rant against the Arch devs and the Arch community.

Wrong yet again. It isn't. I didn't say The Arch and systemd devs are
this and that, I just pointed out some facts about *systemd* that I
find annoying and this has nothing to do with the developers
themselves, for crying out loud! Are you suggesting people should just
shut up and never voice an unfavourable opinion? Or you'd rather
prefer a court of flatterers praising how perfect this world is?

 Several of
 the developers and several people involved with the community are
 systemd developers, and there is certainly consensus among the Arch
 developers and trusted users to use systemd.

Which makes systemd perfect how exactly?

Anyway, if I've offended anyone I offer them my apologies.


-- 
X
https://aur.archlinux.org/packages/?SeB=mK=nous
http://tiny.cc/linux-pf


Re: [arch-general] How to disable systemd-tmpfiles-clean.timer

2014-05-08 Thread Daniel Micay
On 08/05/14 05:10 PM, Christos Nouskas wrote:
 I guess you'll be upset that Tom (one of the Arch developers) wrote
 systemd-networkd.
 
 You guess wrong.

So you're okay with it providing networking, but not timer units? Timer
units were a very simple addition on top of the existing event loop,
while networkd is a significant project.

 You'll probably also be upset that there's going to be
 a simple systemd-console from the kmscon developer (who is an Arch user)
 and a systemd-timesyncd for basic NTP clients not needing a full blown
 server with complicated RTC handling.
 
 Again wrong. Unless they're enabled by default.

The systemd console would replace the virtual terminals provided by the
kernel. The NTP client might make sense as something enabled by default,
although I don't know if it's planned to be.

 Everyone else will continue on with their lives, because they realize
 that there's nothing wrong with maintaining more than one binary/library
 under one version control repository.
 
 Don't escalate and don't make it personal. You're just guessing wrong;
 I don't mind running systemd, unless it decides what's best for me
 without asking me. Clearing /tmp is one of those annoying things.

I'm don't see how I'm making it personal with a bit of sarcasm.

You already made it quite personal by promoting FUD with gems like this:

 systemd's team is noticeably chauvinistic

Do you think Tom and Dave are chauvanistic? Or did you not really read
what you linked to?

 I've also been annoyed by the fact that I have a PC that won't boot
 with systemd198-2, because systemd can't mount /usr/local (which is
 empty).

I'm not sure what you mean by this.

 On the other hand I do love the _netdev  x-systemd.automount
 directives in /etc/fstab.
 
 This is a rant against the Arch devs and the Arch community.
 
 Wrong yet again. It isn't. I didn't say The Arch and systemd devs are
 this and that, I just pointed out some facts about *systemd* that I
 find annoying and this has nothing to do with the developers
 themselves, for crying out loud! Are you suggesting people should just
 shut up and never voice an unfavourable opinion? Or you'd rather
 prefer a court of flatterers praising how perfect this world is?

No, I'm asking you to stop spreading misinformation and attacks on the
developers behind the project (who also develop Arch Linux). If you
interrupt a constructive thread with FUD, you can expect to be called out.

 Several of
 the developers and several people involved with the community are
 systemd developers, and there is certainly consensus among the Arch
 developers and trusted users to use systemd.
 
 Which makes systemd perfect how exactly?

No one said it's perfect.

 Anyway, if I've offended anyone I offer them my apologies.



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Re: [arch-general] How to disable systemd-tmpfiles-clean.timer

2014-05-08 Thread Christos Nouskas
Do accept the fact that not everyone is content with everything
systemd and just leave it at that. Thank you and bye.


-- 
X
https://aur.archlinux.org/packages/?SeB=mK=nous
http://tiny.cc/linux-pf


Re: [arch-general] How to disable systemd-tmpfiles-clean.timer

2014-05-08 Thread Daniel Micay
On 08/05/14 05:37 PM, Christos Nouskas wrote:
 Do accept the fact that not everyone is content with everything
 systemd and just leave it at that. Thank you and bye.

That can be expressed without calling the developers chauvanistic and
spreading misinformation. It's yet a free software project available to
people who want it, and you can choose to use an alternative like runit
instead.



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Re: [arch-general] How to disable systemd-tmpfiles-clean.timer

2014-05-08 Thread Daniel Micay
On 08/05/14 03:40 PM, Daniel Micay wrote:

 [0] http://boycottsystemd.org/
 
 There are no facts there. I already responded to this FUD on reddit:
 http://www.reddit.com/r/archlinux/comments/24zj10/what_are_the_benefits_of_partitioning_disk_space/chcao5u
 

Whoops, wrong link:

http://www.reddit.com/r/programming/comments/23tyez/this_group_wants_to_revive_the_systemd_debate/ch0maow



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Re: [arch-general] How to disable systemd-tmpfiles-clean.timer

2014-05-08 Thread Guus Snijders
Op 8 mei 2014 21:41 schreef Daniel Micay danielmi...@gmail.com het
volgende:

[...]

 and a systemd-timesyncd for basic NTP clients not needing a full blown
 server with complicated RTC handling.

Just for the record: that is what is called sntp (Simple ntp). Ntp is about
clock sync, sntp just sets the clock.
As long as it's used as any daemon, i'd ok with that being enabled by
default; those can be simply disabled (remove symlink or systemctl
disable), as i prefer a real ntp on my systems.

mvg, Guus


Re: [arch-general] How to disable systemd-tmpfiles-clean.timer

2014-05-08 Thread Mark Lee
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On 05/08/2014 05:22 PM, Daniel Micay wrote:
 On 08/05/14 05:10 PM, Christos Nouskas wrote:
 I guess you'll be upset that Tom (one of the Arch developers) wrote
 systemd-networkd.

 You guess wrong.
 
 So you're okay with it providing networking, but not timer units? Timer
 units were a very simple addition on top of the existing event loop,
 while networkd is a significant project.
 
 You'll probably also be upset that there's going to be
 a simple systemd-console from the kmscon developer (who is an Arch user)
 and a systemd-timesyncd for basic NTP clients not needing a full blown
 server with complicated RTC handling.

 Again wrong. Unless they're enabled by default.
 
 The systemd console would replace the virtual terminals provided by the
 kernel. The NTP client might make sense as something enabled by default,
 although I don't know if it's planned to be.
 
 Everyone else will continue on with their lives, because they realize
 that there's nothing wrong with maintaining more than one binary/library
 under one version control repository.

 Don't escalate and don't make it personal. You're just guessing wrong;
 I don't mind running systemd, unless it decides what's best for me
 without asking me. Clearing /tmp is one of those annoying things.
 
 I'm don't see how I'm making it personal with a bit of sarcasm.
 
 You already made it quite personal by promoting FUD with gems like this:
 
 systemd's team is noticeably chauvinistic
 
 Do you think Tom and Dave are chauvanistic? Or did you not really read
 what you linked to?
 
 I've also been annoyed by the fact that I have a PC that won't boot
 with systemd198-2, because systemd can't mount /usr/local (which is
 empty).
 
 I'm not sure what you mean by this.
 
 On the other hand I do love the _netdev  x-systemd.automount
 directives in /etc/fstab.

 This is a rant against the Arch devs and the Arch community.

 Wrong yet again. It isn't. I didn't say The Arch and systemd devs are
 this and that, I just pointed out some facts about *systemd* that I
 find annoying and this has nothing to do with the developers
 themselves, for crying out loud! Are you suggesting people should just
 shut up and never voice an unfavourable opinion? Or you'd rather
 prefer a court of flatterers praising how perfect this world is?
 
 No, I'm asking you to stop spreading misinformation and attacks on the
 developers behind the project (who also develop Arch Linux). If you
 interrupt a constructive thread with FUD, you can expect to be called out.
 
 Several of
 the developers and several people involved with the community are
 systemd developers, and there is certainly consensus among the Arch
 developers and trusted users to use systemd.

 Which makes systemd perfect how exactly?
 
 No one said it's perfect.
 
 Anyway, if I've offended anyone I offer them my apologies.
 

To all,

Don't make any of this personal. In addition, I hope the inclusion of
systemd in Arch Linux has more justification than just some Arch
developers are also Systemd developers. Arch may not be a democracy, but
it's not supposed to be infested with cronyism either (I don't think it
is). Let's all be calm and collected here and sort things out.

Regards,
Mark
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Re: [arch-general] How to disable systemd-tmpfiles-clean.timer

2014-05-08 Thread Daniel Micay
On 09/05/14 01:01 AM, Mark Lee wrote:
 
 To all,
 
 Don't make any of this personal. In addition, I hope the inclusion of
 systemd in Arch Linux has more justification than just some Arch
 developers are also Systemd developers. Arch may not be a democracy, but
 it's not supposed to be infested with cronyism either (I don't think it
 is). Let's all be calm and collected here and sort things out.
 
 Regards,
 Mark

I never stated that it was a reason for it being included in Arch Linux.

You're misrepresenting what I said.

The context of the thread is someone promoting content including a lot
of inaccurate claims and ad hominem attacks like this: systemd's team
is noticeably chauvinistic and anti-Unix and yet making this claim:

 This is not a rant against Arch or its devs and community, but against
 systemd; the sad facts speak for themselves.

I was countering the claim by pointing out that the group of people they
are disparaging includes several Arch developers and other prominent
people in the community.



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Re: [arch-general] How to disable systemd-tmpfiles-clean.timer

2014-05-08 Thread Mark Lee
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Hash: SHA256

On 05/09/2014 01:22 AM, Daniel Micay wrote:
 On 09/05/14 01:01 AM, Mark Lee wrote:

 To all,

 Don't make any of this personal. In addition, I hope the inclusion of
 systemd in Arch Linux has more justification than just some Arch
 developers are also Systemd developers. Arch may not be a democracy, but
 it's not supposed to be infested with cronyism either (I don't think it
 is). Let's all be calm and collected here and sort things out.

 Regards,
 Mark
 
 I never stated that it was a reason for it being included in Arch Linux.
 
 You're misrepresenting what I said.
 
 The context of the thread is someone promoting content including a lot
 of inaccurate claims and ad hominem attacks like this: systemd's team
 is noticeably chauvinistic and anti-Unix and yet making this claim:
 
 This is not a rant against Arch or its devs and community, but against
 systemd; the sad facts speak for themselves.
 
 I was countering the claim by pointing out that the group of people they
 are disparaging includes several Arch developers and other prominent
 people in the community.
 

To Daniel,

I'm pointing out that respect for people shouldn't affect technical
skepticism. People can rant against whomever they want as long as it has
technical criticism (at least on this mailing list). Hence, don't make
anything personal.

Regards,
Mark
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Re: [arch-general] How to disable systemd-tmpfiles-clean.timer

2014-05-08 Thread Daniel Micay
On 09/05/14 01:29 AM, Mark Lee wrote:
 
 To Daniel,
 
 I'm pointing out that respect for people shouldn't affect technical
 skepticism. People can rant against whomever they want as long as it has
 technical criticism (at least on this mailing list). 

Accusing the developers of bad faith and spreading misinformation about
the project is not technical skepticism. I'll quote one of my earlier
statements:

 Bashing an open-source project and spreading FUD about it is always an
 attack on the open-source community, whether it's GNOME, systemd, KDE,
 PHP, or something else. It's one thing to take a rational look at a
 project and criticize it, and quite another to promote content
 accusing the developers of having bad faith without *any* evidence.

 Hence, don't make anything personal.

 Regards,
 Mark

You're implying that I've made it personal, but I don't think I've done
any such thing. What have I said that you think is venturing into the
land of a personal attack?



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