• ZephrC@lemm.ee
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    8 months ago

    That might have been true a decade ago. I don’t actually know. I do know that modern init scripts for modern alternatives to systemd are barely longer than systemd service scripts though. So that’s kind of an insane take.

    • waitmarks@lemmy.world
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      8 months ago

      can you give examples of some? Not trying to bd sarcastic, i do just want to see what alternatives are doing.

      • ZephrC@lemm.ee
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        8 months ago

        Sure, that seems pretty reasonable. Here’s the init script for sddm:

        #!/usr/bin/openrc-run
        
        supervisor=supervise-daemon
        command="/usr/bin/sddm"
        
        depend() {
            need localmount
        
            after bootmisc consolefont modules netmount
            after ypbind autofs openvpn gpm lircmd
            after quota keymaps
            before alsasound
            want logind
            use xfs
        
            provide xdm display-manager
        }
        

        That’s it. That’s the whole thing.

        That’s a pretty simple one though, so here’s Alsa. It’s a more complex one:

        code
        #!/usr/bin/openrc-run
        # Copyright 1999-2019 Gentoo Authors
        # Distributed under the terms of the GNU General Public License v2
        
        alsastatedir=/var/lib/alsa
        alsascrdir=/etc/alsa.d
        alsahomedir=/run/alsasound
        
        extra_commands="save restore"
        
        depend() {
        	need localmount
        	after bootmisc modules isapnp coldplug hotplug
        }
        
        restore() {
        	ebegin "Restoring Mixer Levels"
        
        	checkpath -q -d -m 0700 -o root:root ${alsahomedir} || return 1
        
        	if [ ! -r "${alsastatedir}/asound.state" ] ; then
        		ewarn "No mixer config in ${alsastatedir}/asound.state, you have to unmute your card!"
        		eend 0
        		return 0
        	fi
        
        	local cards="$(sed -n -e 's/^ *\([[:digit:]]*\) .*/\1/p' /proc/asound/cards)"
        	local CARDNUM
        	for cardnum in ${cards}; do
        		[ -e /dev/snd/controlC${cardnum} ] || sleep 2
        		[ -e /dev/snd/controlC${cardnum} ] || sleep 2
        		[ -e /dev/snd/controlC${cardnum} ] || sleep 2
        		[ -e /dev/snd/controlC${cardnum} ] || sleep 2
        		alsactl -E HOME="${alsahomedir}" -I -f "${alsastatedir}/asound.state" restore ${cardnum} \
        			|| ewarn "Errors while restoring defaults, ignoring"
        	done
        
        	for ossfile in "${alsastatedir}"/oss/card*_pcm* ; do
        		[ -e "${ossfile}" ] || continue
        		# We use cat because I'm not sure if cp works properly on /proc
        		local procfile=${ossfile##${alsastatedir}/oss}
        		procfile="$(echo "${procfile}" | sed -e 's,_,/,g')"
        		if [ -e /proc/asound/"${procfile}"/oss ] ; then
        		    cat "${ossfile}" > /proc/asound/"${procfile}"/oss 
        		fi
        	done
        
        	eend 0
        }
        
        save() {
        	ebegin "Storing ALSA Mixer Levels"
        
        	checkpath -q -d -m 0700 -o root:root ${alsahomedir} || return 1
        
        	mkdir -p "${alsastatedir}"
        	if ! alsactl -E HOME="${alsahomedir}" -f "${alsastatedir}/asound.state" store; then
        		eerror "Error saving levels."
        		eend 1
        		return 1
        	fi
        
        	for ossfile in /proc/asound/card*/pcm*/oss; do
        		[ -e "${ossfile}" ] || continue
        		local device=${ossfile##/proc/asound/} ; device=${device%%/oss}
        		device="$(echo "${device}" | sed -e 's,/,_,g')"
        		mkdir -p "${alsastatedir}/oss/"
        		cp "${ossfile}" "${alsastatedir}/oss/${device}"
        	done
        
        	eend 0
        }
        
        start() {
        	if [ "${RESTORE_ON_START}" = "yes" ]; then
        		restore
        	fi
        
        	return 0
        }
        
        stop() {
        	if [ "${SAVE_ON_STOP}" = "yes" ]; then
        		save
        	fi
        	return 0
        }
        

        That’s definitely longer than a systemd service, but you’d have to write an awful lot of them to be more code than all of systemd. Overall the entire /etc/init.d folder on my PC where all the init scripts even for the stuff I’m not using are stored is a grand total of 147.7 KiB. Not exactly an unmanageable amount of code, in my humble opinion.

        • waitmarks@lemmy.world
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          8 months ago

          Its certainly easier to read than most old init scripts and I can see why some distros and openbsd would pick it over systemd for more control. I’m not likely to pick a distro that uses it anytime soon, but i can see why some do.