From mboxrd@z Thu Jan 1 00:00:00 1970 From: Stefan Schweizer Date: Sat, 18 Dec 2004 09:48:00 +0000 Subject: Re: Bug#286040: please allow permissions.d to follow symlinks Message-Id: List-Id: References: <20041217083115.GA4050@wonderland.linux.it> In-Reply-To: <20041217083115.GA4050@wonderland.linux.it> MIME-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii" Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit To: linux-hotplug@vger.kernel.org On Sat, 18 Dec 2004 05:21:11 +0100, martin f krafft wrote: > also sprach Greg KH [2004.12.18.0404 +0100]: > > So, on what "technological level" do you rank the current crop of > > distros (and by "crop" I mean ones that have had a release.) > > I do not rank. Fact is that I will see whether Debian can continue > to use permissions.d and provide the symlink following I initially > requested, simply because I consider policy-based approaches to be > important. Without going comparative, this is going to put Debian on > a different level than other distros which go ahead to dump > permissions.d *with respect to* udev permission handling. This will > make it difficult to converge on a common set of rules. > If you look at the code you will see that removing permissions.d and keeping everything in rules.d will make the code more lightweight, make udevstart faster, and therefore startup for the udev users faster. > You told me at Sucon '04 that (one of) your main beef(s) with Debian > is that we do not make patches with improvements available upstream. > I promised you I would look into this and try to improve the > situation. However, reading the archives, talking to Marco, and > looking at bugs, it seems to me that we are banging our heads > against the wall that you hold up, that you simply do not want our > patches. I think every maintainer does not just merge patches, but thinks about what they do, and maybe better solutions, how the goal could be achieved. Thing is, that patches, which are not send upstream never get discussed or reviewed and therefore have a much less code quality. > A bystander might conclude from this very case we are > discussing here that you are now crippling upstream just to make > sure it will differ from Debian. This is a prejudice against gregkh, what should he benefit from it? We are in a open source world here, not in a economic, where you have to compete. We will try to find a good solution for this, which is acceptible for all parties. > What is the benefit of merging permissions in with rules that > identify and name devices? > It makes it just easier for the user. He/She does not have to look in 2 different locations, he does not need to know the permissions.d syntax, he does not need to know about this extra file, he has one unified configuration interface. Its easier, lightweighter, faster ... just think about it once more. > If you answered that, please also think about the reasons why Fedora > uses /etc/sysconfig (and Gentoo probably does something similar). Gentoo uses /etc/conf.d for system init script configuration. But we have one unified configuration interface there, it is all CONFNAME="option", and not a different interface like the one in the permissions.d file, as that would confuse users. > > And why wouldn't all distros benifit from such a set of unified rules? > > I am not at all denying this. > How to unify rules when there are differences in opinions? > We should sort out our differences, and come to a decision, that is acceptable for everybody. It shouldnt be that hard to have one configuration interface in all distros and not one for every distro. And after all I think even debian as the most widespread free distribution should hear why the udev maintainer denies something and not just make their own "debian-udev". Kind regards, Stefan ------------------------------------------------------- SF email is sponsored by - The IT Product Guide Read honest & candid reviews on hundreds of IT Products from real users. Discover which products truly live up to the hype. Start reading now. http://productguide.itmanagersjournal.com/ _______________________________________________ Linux-hotplug-devel mailing list http://linux-hotplug.sourceforge.net Linux-hotplug-devel@lists.sourceforge.net https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/linux-hotplug-devel