Japheth Cleaver
2018-Oct-19 00:52 UTC
[CentOS] Upstream and downstream (was Re: What are the differences between systemd and non-systemd Linux distros?)
On 10/18/2018 4:41 PM, Warren Young wrote:> On Oct 18, 2018, at 9:41 AM, mark <m.roth at 5-cent.us> wrote: >> people are tired of screaming and yelling about >> systemd, because we've had years now of the response being "tough, it's >> the Wave of the Future" > We covered that back when RHEL 7 was still in beta: the time is far too late to change the init system of RHEL 7. The fact that you?re tired of being ignored doesn?t enter into it: you could still be yelling about it, and it still wouldn?t change. Red Has simply isn?t going to swap out its Enterprise Linux init system within a major release cycle. > > I believe it?s certain that RHEL 8 (and thus CentOS 8) will also be systemd-based, since we?d be hearing about the change by now via Fedora if it were otherwise. >This brings to mind a video I was pointed to not long ago of Brendan Conoboy's talk at a Dojo recently: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HQsUdLPJW20 For quite a long time, many (perhaps most) folks had assumed that Fedora functioned more or less directly as the internal alpha for RHEL, with a branch at some point occurring, followed by pruning of packages, hardening, vendor testing, and release. Subsequently, CentOS (even after the RH integration) functioned *strictly* as a clean-room downstream rebuild, with the ability to do unsupported things, like alternate architectures, or heavier kernels, restricted to what could be done while maintaining a 100% binary compatible rebuild. Any contributions back up where taken to be incidental, from CentOS users reporting bugs that could be verified against RHEL. Conoboy, on the other hand, takes great pains during the speech to describe a much more fluid and complex interaction between CentOS and its upstream, and puts forth CentOS as a mechanism (perhaps the best mechanism) for the winder EL community to contribute (something?) back into RHEL's future. He also gives clear signals that various Fedora steps have been in directions that Red Hat did not want EL necessarily going, and that the simplistic assumptions we've commonly been making aren't really correct. Obviously, there seems to be a bit of a discrepancy there. The wider EL community is trapped between a rock and a hard place somewhat. If you try to direct Fedora into the needs of EL users, you stand a good chance of getting told to pound stand, and that EL is getting in the way of bleeding-edge progress. Traditionally, CentOS has had its hands tied since it aims to be 100% compatible with upstream. Red Hat (and Red-Hat-as-a-sponsor-of-CentOS) might do well to clarify just what type of back-and-forth it wants out of the wider EL-using community. Does it want direct feedback in the form of tickets? Should people form SIGs? Obviously RHEL7 is not changing init systems, but where should one talk about the future?>> Poettering is like upper management: they >> know, I mean, Everything, so why should they need to talk to end users (or >> working sysadmins)? > The suggestion that Red Hat is not listening to working system administrators beggars belief. That?s pretty much the basis of their company?s major income stream. > > What Red Hat is not doing is filling every demand from all working system administrators. They?re choosing which demands to address, as any software project management must.This seems a bit specious. How many working SA's and Engineers at paid shops call up their Red Hat rep for something like this? This isn't the type of thing you demand a strategy conference call from them for unless you're absolutely huge, or you have a very bored manager. People just complained (heavily) about it internally, went back to fixing the latest crisis, and hoped the adults working on RHEL would do the right thing when it came to reliability. I'm sure Red Hat understands that looking at the financials of dropped licenses and counting up the total of any vague, complaining support tickets are not the whole picture. On the other point (while keeping personalities out of it)... I think EL users are likely to have more experience in large, enterprise organizations -- the kind of orgs where technical decisions sometimes take a back seat to politics. Everyone's seen a land grab in person, and everyone's seen, and probably done themselves -- I know I have, techniques for getting a toe-hold, leveraging it into a larger area of control, and ensuring your project becomes pretty much indispensable. The suggestion that this has occasionally happened at Red Hat and that questionable technical situations might have resulted doesn't seem unreasonable, even if it is indeed out of scope for this list. -jc
Warren Young
2018-Oct-19 01:35 UTC
[CentOS] Upstream and downstream (was Re: What are the differences between systemd and non-systemd Linux distros?)
On Oct 18, 2018, at 6:52 PM, Japheth Cleaver <cleaver at terabithia.org> wrote:> > Conoboy, on the other hand, takes great pains during the speech to describe a much more fluid and complex interaction between CentOS and its upstream, and puts forth CentOS as a mechanism (perhaps the best mechanism) for the winder EL community to contribute (something?) back into RHEL's future.I don?t see a change as significant as a new (or old!) init system making its way up from CentOS or Fedora to RHEL. But hey, if you wanted to spend your time trying, that?s a *far* better use of your time than griping about systemd on mailing lists. I think forking CentOS 5 or 6 is less effort, but hey, your time, your project. If anyone out there is thinking this is too much work, some of the major Linux distributions are, or were at one point, largely one-person efforts. It is certainly not a lot of work, but you don?t need a multibillion dollar company to fork CentOS. Both projects could fail, and it would still be a much better signal to Red Hat what the people want. Again: working code argues best.
Warren Young
2018-Oct-19 01:39 UTC
[CentOS] Upstream and downstream (was Re: What are the differences between systemd and non-systemd Linux distros?)
On Oct 18, 2018, at 7:35 PM, Warren Young <warren at etr-usa.com> wrote:> > It is certainly not a lot of workTypo: remove ?not?. Running your own Linux distro is a *lot* of work. Just ask our benefactors here! Also, I should clarify that I?m not calling for action for my own benefit. I?m a happy CentOS 7 user; it would take a *very* nice alternative to make me switch. I?m just saying that I?d much rather see people starting a project to produce a new distro than more anti-systemd griping. If the project is successful, the user community can then vote with its feet.
Matthew Miller
2018-Oct-20 13:23 UTC
[CentOS] Upstream and downstream (was Re: What are the differences between systemd and non-systemd Linux distros?)
On Thu, Oct 18, 2018 at 05:52:12PM -0700, Japheth Cleaver wrote:> The wider EL community is trapped between a rock and a hard place > somewhat. If you try to direct Fedora into the needs of EL users, > you stand a good chance of getting told to pound stand, and that EL > is getting in the way of bleeding-edge progress. Traditionally,For what it's worth (I hope something!) I think this is an outdated fear or assumption. Before Fedora.next, the "default user" for Fedora was assumed to be an indiviual desktop user, and the overall Fedora OS offering meant to be one-size-fits-all but modeled to that user. That wasn't working, partly for the reason you identify here. Nonetheless, something like 20% of Fedora usage is on servers, and a lot of people work with Fedora in parallel with a Enterprise Linux deployment. We needed to find a place for those users to have a voice. So, Fedora Server was explicitly chartered as not just for its own sake (although we intend to make that true as well) but also the intentional upstream for downstream enterprise Linux consumers. That doesn't mean that every change there goes into RHEL, or is RH blessed or even Red Hat aligned ? but the needs of EL users are *definitely* taken into account.> wider EL-using community. Does it want direct feedback in the form > of tickets? Should people form SIGs? Obviously RHEL7 is not changing > init systems, but where should one talk about the future?If this is your interest, I'd really encourage you to get more involved in Fedora Server. We could use your input. -- Matthew Miller <mattdm at fedoraproject.org> Fedora Project Leader
Valeri Galtsev
2018-Oct-20 14:42 UTC
[CentOS] Upstream and downstream (was Re: What are the differences between systemd and non-systemd Linux distros?)
On Sat, October 20, 2018 8:23 am, Matthew Miller wrote:> On Thu, Oct 18, 2018 at 05:52:12PM -0700, Japheth Cleaver wrote: >> The wider EL community is trapped between a rock and a hard place >> somewhat. If you try to direct Fedora into the needs of EL users, >> you stand a good chance of getting told to pound stand, and that EL >> is getting in the way of bleeding-edge progress. Traditionally, > > For what it's worth (I hope something!) I think this is an outdated fear > or > assumption. Before Fedora.next, the "default user" for Fedora was assumed > to > be an indiviual desktop user, and the overall Fedora OS offering meant to > be > one-size-fits-all but modeled to that user. That wasn't working, partly > for the reason you identify here. Nonetheless, something like 20% of > Fedora > usage is on servers, and a lot of people work with Fedora in parallel with > a Enterprise Linux deployment. We needed to find a place for those users > to > have a voice.I would like to hear the reasons of those who chose to use Fedora on their server. Specifically what advantages one has found compared to other alternatives. And also what kind of server that is. Single user/home/family one? Serving some department or similar (say 100 people, who may need services 24/7/365)? I know, this is just my curiosity, as I did make my own choice, but curiosity grossly fueled by the fact that my choice is grossly different. Always happy to hear different [from mine] opinions which may be based on different objectives. Valeri> > So, Fedora Server was explicitly chartered as not just for its own sake > (although we intend to make that true as well) but also the intentional > upstream for downstream enterprise Linux consumers. That doesn't mean that > every change there goes into RHEL, or is RH blessed or even Red Hat > aligned > ??? but the needs of EL users are *definitely* taken into account. > > >> wider EL-using community. Does it want direct feedback in the form >> of tickets? Should people form SIGs? Obviously RHEL7 is not changing >> init systems, but where should one talk about the future? > > If this is your interest, I'd really encourage you to get more involved > in Fedora Server. We could use your input. > > > -- > Matthew Miller > <mattdm at fedoraproject.org> > Fedora Project Leader > _______________________________________________ > CentOS mailing list > CentOS at centos.org > https://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos >++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ Valeri Galtsev Sr System Administrator Department of Astronomy and Astrophysics Kavli Institute for Cosmological Physics University of Chicago Phone: 773-702-4247 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
Japheth Cleaver
2018-Oct-20 23:14 UTC
[CentOS] Upstream and downstream (was Re: What are the differences between systemd and non-systemd Linux distros?)
On 10/20/2018 6:23 AM, Matthew Miller wrote:> On Thu, Oct 18, 2018 at 05:52:12PM -0700, Japheth Cleaver wrote: >> The wider EL community is trapped between a rock and a hard place >> somewhat. If you try to direct Fedora into the needs of EL users, >> you stand a good chance of getting told to pound stand, and that EL >> is getting in the way of bleeding-edge progress. Traditionally, > For what it's worth (I hope something!) I think this is an outdated fear or > assumption. Before Fedora.next, the "default user" for Fedora was assumed to > be an indiviual desktop user, and the overall Fedora OS offering meant to be > one-size-fits-all but modeled to that user. That wasn't working, partly > for the reason you identify here. Nonetheless, something like 20% of Fedora > usage is on servers, and a lot of people work with Fedora in parallel with > a Enterprise Linux deployment. We needed to find a place for those users to > have a voice. > > So, Fedora Server was explicitly chartered as not just for its own sake > (although we intend to make that true as well) but also the intentional > upstream for downstream enterprise Linux consumers. That doesn't mean that > every change there goes into RHEL, or is RH blessed or even Red Hat aligned > ? but the needs of EL users are *definitely* taken into account. >> wider EL-using community. Does it want direct feedback in the form >> of tickets? Should people form SIGs? Obviously RHEL7 is not changing >> init systems, but where should one talk about the future? > If this is your interest, I'd really encourage you to get more involved > in Fedora Server. We could use your input. >This does indeed remind me of the "ring" concept, with the (perhaps overloaded) "Core" being something that all subsequent variations on top of Fedora (or Fedora-as-upstream) can use with potentially more and more alterations in policy, build, selection, and UX the further downstream you get. The problem is that it seems like very low level decisions are and have been made that align most closely with the needs of the "individual desktop user" rather than in a more neutral manner that allows for meaningful distinctions *outside* of minor configs. Fedora Server can override Fedora configs, but it still has to deal with those Fedora-wide changes. Knowing at least that, for now, Fedora Server is trying to serve in this role is definitely encouragement to get more involved there, but I do fear a larger paradigm shift is involved. Some of the Fedora-pushing is most visible in the use of Packaging Guidelines to implement that Fedora-specific policy; the outright *banning* of initscripts in RPMs (rather than allowing them to continue as subpackages or conditionals a la tcp_wrappers) is the ur-example, but there are more. Fedora inherited a lot of the moral leadership of RHL, but if there's question whether it can safely be considered "upstream" for EL (to say nothing of providing guidance other RPM-based distros), then I wonder if a further reorganization is necessary beyond Fedora into Fedora+Workstation/Server/Atomic. Maybe if we had something above both Fedora *and* EL (whether the EL is RHEL or a Community *Input* ENTprise OS) which worked to enforce maximal downstream flexibility for its packages (rawhide specs, if you were), it might reduce some of this tension and provide an easier entry point for people wanting to get more involved in EL, but not interfere with overall Fedora questions. (That's really two distinct proposals there, but I hope my meaning comes through.) -jc
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- Upstream and downstream (was Re: What are the differences between systemd and non-systemd Linux distros?)
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- Upstream and downstream (was Re: What are the differences between systemd and non-systemd Linux distros?)
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