The journald design is horrible to the point of useless
The journald design is horrible to the point of useless
Posted Nov 25, 2011 9:09 UTC (Fri) by anselm (subscriber, #2796)In reply to: The journald design is horrible to the point of useless by cas
Parent article: That newfangled Journal thing
At the beginning of the 1990s there was that thing called Linux that presumably might be able to mature into a usable operating system given the right kind of attention. The fact that it would have been possible to add the few minor useful tweaks that were salvageable from that Linux idea to an existing operating system like BSD without any need for reinventing years/decades of existing practice does not seem to have discouraged people from providing exactly that sort of attention, and look where we are now.
Many people (including apparently you) seem to confuse the »Journal« proposal with something that has emerged 100% finished, to be adopted immediately with no further changes or improvements. I prefer to see it as a starting point for discussion and thoughts on what the weaknesses are in the current logging infrastructure, and how best to address them. Whether what we will be using 5 or 10 years from now will bear a closer resemblance to 1980s syslog or »The Journal« remains to be seen, but I think it is best to keep an open mind.
Incidentally, nobody talks about »discarding years/decades of existing practice«. If you would actually care to read the Journal proposal, it mentions the fact that it is possible to run both it and a traditional syslogd in parallel. Also, the proposal does raise important points that IMHO can't be solved simply by tweaking rsyslogd; I'd be interested in how you intend to add these »trivially«.
