>>> Lennart Poettering <lennart@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx> schrieb am 15.05.2019 um 12:20 in Nachricht <20190515102024.GB23038@gardel-login>: > On Mi, 15.05.19 12:12, Ulrich Windl (Ulrich.Windl@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx) > wrote: > >> >>> Lennart Poettering <lennart@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx> schrieb am 15.05.2019 um 12:04 >> in >> Nachricht <20190515100400.GB22945@gardel-login>: >> > On Mi, 15.05.19 12:01, Ulrich Windl (Ulrich.Windl@xxxxxx‑regensburg.de) >> wrote: >> > >> >> > Writing a generator is not a typical user would do. It's what a >> >> > developer of a package would do, and yes, in that case, when you write >> >> > code you need a bit more understanding of the underpinnings and need >> >> > to do more work. >> >> >> >> systemd.generator(7) could really need some (better/realistic) examples. >> > >> > I think you assume generators are something they inherently are not. >> >> Even if so, a better example might clarify things. Just referring to a > binary >> generator like systemd-fstab-generator is not really helpful to teach how to >> write a generator. You don't like scripts as generators, but I think still > they >> would make a good example what a generator is supposed to do and what not. > > Well, there can always be more examples, but "generators" are > inherently an advanced concept: if you are writing a generator, then > you already should be pro enough to be able to consult the sources of > the various generators shipped with systemd. > > i.e. it's not a beginners topic, it's a very low-level, technicallly > advanced one. But you can assume that someone reading the manual page about generators wants to ...well... read about generators. Otherwise you could shorten the manual page to "Go away! You are not supposed to read this." Rehgards, Ulrich _______________________________________________ systemd-devel mailing list systemd-devel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx https://lists.freedesktop.org/mailman/listinfo/systemd-devel