On Mon, Jul 05, 2004 at 11:44:51AM +0200, Owen Taylor wrote:
On Fri, 2004-05-28 at 18:05, Thomas Woerner wrote:
There are test packages in http://people.redhat.com/twoerner/UDEV/ for using udev in initrd with persistent devices.
I just wanted to revisit this and ask how this work was going?
I really have no technical opinions on how it should be implemented in detail, but I think it's pretty important to get default use of udev(*) into FC3 ... not just for dynamic device usage, HAL, etc, but in order to make read-only root setups (e.g., LTSP style network boot) easier.
Regards, Owen
(*) I know some people (yes, you, Jeremy) have serious reservations about the details of how udev is implemented. And I really just mean "dynamic creation of device nodes on a ram filesystem". But I don't think the fact that udev is too bloated/complex/policyless/whatever to run in Anaconda should keep us from trying to start fixing these problems for installed systems.
If HAL is also a daemon, then it could also provide the same functionality as udev? Or could dbus-support be added to udev, too?
I also haven't looked at this myself, but AFAIK udev is collecting the information to maintain /dev and hal is a daemon providing information on available hardware. Hmmm...
greetings,
Florian La Roche