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init/README
David Oberhollenzer 8216cedecb Add README file
Signed-off-by: David Oberhollenzer <david.oberhollenzer@tele2.at>
2018-03-25 01:00:00 +01:00

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This directory contains the source code for a tiny init devised for
the Pygos system.
The main goal of this project is to create a simple framework for:
- system boot up and initialization
- service supervision
With the additional aims of having something that:
- simply works
- is easy to understand
- is easy to configure and maintain
The init process is intended to run on top of Linux and makes use of some
Linux specific features (e.g. signalfd), but if sufficient interest exists,
it should still be possible to make it run on some BSDs or whatever else.
The init system tries to mimic the concept of unit files from systemd as
those were considered to be a good design choice.
Right now, the system is in a "basically works" proof of concept stage and
needs some more work to become usable.
There are plans for *maybe* *eventually* adding support for Linux name
spaces, seccomp filters and cgroups as needed in the medium future.
There are already a bunch of similar projects out there that have been
considered for use in the Pygos system. The reason for starting a new
one was mainly dissatisfaction with the existing ones. Other Projects
that have been considered include:
- systemd
Contains a lot of good ideas, but it is HUGE. It has tons of
dependencies. It implements tons of things that it simply shouldn't.
It has a horrid, "modern", python based, hipster build system.
It's simply too damn large and complex.
- SystemV init
A bad combination of unnecessary complexity where it isn't needed and a
complete lack of abstraction where it would be needed. Shell script
copy and paste madness. There are reasons people started developing
alternatives (other than "hurr-durr-parallel-boots").
- upstart
Seems nice overall, but needlessly big and complex for the intended
use case in Pygos. Would have needlessly added D-Bus to the system.
- OpenRC
Was already integrated into Pygos. Things turned out to be broken.
Upstream developers did not accept fixes (after ignoring them for weeks
and preferring typo fixes instead). Complaints from other people who
tried to contribute fixes were observed on Github. Complaints from
package maintainers about deteriorating code quality were observed
on the official IRC channel. Documentation is non-existent.
- daemontools and similar (runnit, s6, minit, ...)
The sixties are over. And even code from that era is more readable. The
source code for those projects should better be tossed out the window and
rewritten from scratch. If you are a first semester CS student and you
hand something like this in as a homework, the best you might get is a
well deserved slap on the back of your head.
- busybox init
Nice and simple. Probably the best fit if the rest of your user space is
busybox as well.