On Sun, Oct 21, 2018 at 11:19:52AM -0400, Steve Litt wrote:
> Hi all,
>
> The runit (or daemontools or s6) service directory is the directory
> which is scanned for symlinks of runit directories. The Debian runit
> package sets it to /etc/service, the Void package sets it
> to /var/service, and both djb and runit author G. Pape recommend
> setting it to /service, which of course would be rejected by most
> admins.
>
> Debian's /etc/service is a perfectly good choice as long as:
>
> 1) /etc isn't read only
>
> 2) You're not using runit along with daemontools or s6 or anything else
> which might claim the name "service".
Hi Steve,
In order to facilitate users experimenting with
different init systems, and avoid conflicting when switching
from one to another, how about giving runit its own
directory, for example /etc/service/runit ?
I'm not much of a VM jockey. Under what scenarios is /etc
read-only? The only time I can think of is when there is some sort
of dirty file system issue, but that would likely effect
/var as well as /etc.
Thanks for your efforts!
Joel
> In the short run we can just use the Debian default. Most people have
> read/write /etc, and most people don't simultaneously install runit
> along with either s6 or daemontools/daemontools-encore.
>
> In the longer run I'd recommend /var/rsvc because /var is always
> read-write, and the r in rsvc indicates "runit", where for s6 it would
> be /var/ssvc and daemontools would be /var/dsvc.
>
> For the time being I'll proceed on the assumption that it will
> be /etc/service for the foreseeable future.
>
> Just a heads-up.
>
> SteveT
>
> Steve Litt
> September 2018 featured book: Quit Joblessness: Start Your Own Business
> http://www.troubleshooters.com/startbiz
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--
Joel Roth