My favourite comment has to be:
https://github.com/systemd/systemd/issues/11436#issuecomment-454546312
"You seem to suggest that we should never change any user visible detail. I think this user rule was in error, and it worked for a while by luck, and now it doesn't. This happens all the time."
A configuration worked by luck or was it a bug? Perhaps consulting your daily horoscope will let you know if your user configurations will work. Apparently that also happens _all_ the time. I wonder if they mean all other software in debian or just systemd.
Cheers,
chillfan
‐‐‐‐‐‐‐ Original Message ‐‐‐‐‐‐‐
On Monday, January 21, 2019 11:42 PM, Alessandro Selli <alessandroselli@???> wrote:
> On 22/01/19 at 00:08, wirelessduck--- via Dng wrote:
>
> > https://soylentnews.org/article.pl?sid=19/01/21/042251
> >
> > “Michael Biebl, long-time maintainer of systemd for Debian (2010 or earlier, based on changelog.Debian.gz), is taking undetermined holidays from packaging it.”
> >
> > “Will stop maintaining systemd in debian for a while.
> >
> > What's going on is just too stupid/crazy.”
>
> This takes place after he discussed a bug in which he expected systemd to respect local settings, and not rename network devices:
>
> > > > @yuwata a default policy like /lib/systemd/network/99-default.link should never trump explicit user configuration.
>
> Later he seems surprised about how things roll there:
>
> > > > I'm amazed that I have to point this out....
>
> Yes, it's amazing.
>
> Even more amazing is that such a software was almost universally adopted as a key piece of the OS.
>
> --
> Alessandro Selli <alessandroselli@???>
> VOIP SIP: dhatarattha@???
> Chiave firma e cifratura PGP/GPG signing and encoding key:
> BA651E4050DDFC31E17384BABCE7BD1A1B0DF2AE