:: Re: [Dng] Devuan commitments - will…
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Autor: Joel Roth
Data:  
Para: dng
Assunto: Re: [Dng] Devuan commitments - will trade-off be applied?
Steve Litt wrote:
> What would especially float my boat, once there's a truly depoetterized
> Devuan, is to have the package manager warn me at 160 decibles if I
> decide to install something that pulls in any systemd code, because if
> there's a way to run without systemd code, that's how I want to run,
> even if it means someday I can no longer use Gnumeric or Gimp.
>
> Let me give an analogy that's absolutely offtopic here, I use it only
> as an analogy. Three years ago, I made a policy that no KDE library or
> software would ever exist on any of Troubleshooters.Com computers, any
> computers owned by Steve Litt, or any computers owned by family members
> who expected me to be their IT department. For the most part, I simply
> never install a package beginning with "k". But once in a while I
> install an excellent sounding package, only to see it starting to pull
> in KDE Krap, have to Ctrl+C out of it, and then go back and
> painstakingly remove everything my install put there. My life would
> have been easier if the package manager told me THIS PACKAGE HAS KDE
> REQUIREMENTS, PROCEED N/y.


apt-get gives a list of packages to be installed, and how
many MB of software is involved. That is a good solution
for 90% if not 99% of users.

If you really want to avoid KDE|systemd|bloatware
Probably you could hack apt using pining or similar
technique to prevent bloatware-base from ever being
installable, thereby preventing any bloatware based
libraries from being installed.

In that case, it wouldn't be optional.

I think apt-get sources are perl, so should be
easy to hack on.

Cheers,

Joel

> In the same way, I'd like a big old warning from any package that
> brought in systemd code of any kind, and that *is* ontopic here.
>
> I think a very simple way is to put all packages that pull in systemd
> code, directly or indirectly, in a "contaminated" repository, and have
> that repository not enabled by default. This way, everyone gets their
> choice of how much or how little poetterization they want, and nobody
> accidentally gets a smarmy, fast talking read headed bespecticled bug
> in their operating system.
>
> And once again, I'd like to state the opinion that getting anything
> working that will long term be systemd-encumbered should be a much
> lower priority than depoetterizing what we can.
>
> SteveT
>
> Steve Litt                *  http://www.troubleshooters.com/
> Troubleshooting Training  *  Human Performance

>
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--
Joel Roth