Could you please stop signing mails sent to this publicly accessible, archived, and indexed/searchable mailing list with this impossible boilerplate: > IMPORTANT: The contents of this email and any attachments are confidential. > They are intended for the named recipient(s) only. If you have received > this email by mistake, please notify the sender immediately and do not > disclose the contents to anyone or make copies thereof. Thank you. On Fri, Sep 04, 2020 at 06:16:06PM -0400, Shravan Singh wrote: > What constitutes a configuration? > And please read my email subject. I can't have writable /etc, mender > dosen't allow that. > > In today's mobile computing age you really think users shouldn't change > timezone? > You keep saying " I for one am certainly not convinced that the timezones" > but you don't explain why? > Are you looking at this system as a static machine? That can never change > timezone? > > And please don't use profanity. I have not and you shouldn't either. > > Regards, > Shravan Singh > (239) 243-0838 > > Blue Sparq, Inc. > 928 NE 24th Lane unit 4 and 5. > Cape Coral, FL 33993 > > IMPORTANT: The contents of this email and any attachments are confidential. > They are intended for the named recipient(s) only. If you have received > this email by mistake, please notify the sender immediately and do not > disclose the contents to anyone or make copies thereof. > > > On Fri, Sep 4, 2020 at 6:05 PM Lennart Poettering <lennart@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx> > wrote: > > > On Fr, 04.09.20 15:54, Shravan Singh (shravan@xxxxxxxxxxxxx) wrote: > > > > > Yes, But help me understand. > > > I think you said that you are not convinced as to why that has to done. > > > > > > My argument is very simple shouldn't a Linux environment allow change in > > > timezone easily? > > > > Oh we do. But if your want configuration to be changable, then mount > > /etc writable. > > > > You have two contradicting goals: you want immutable config, but then > > you want to change config. So how's that gonna work? > > > > If you want your persistent config changable then make it changable, > > i.e. mount /etc/ writable. > > > > > Now I am not an expert in Linux kernel development. But I see that some > > of > > > the files, even though they reside in /etc are linked to file in /run > > > Like *resolv.conf. *Which allows dynamic changes. > > > > I explained this already. DNS server data today is much less config > > than state, acquired dynamically via DHCP, hence most distros don#t > > configure it in /etc so much anymore, but manage it in /run (where > > transient state is generally kept), and only keep a compat symlink in > > /etc. If you try to convince people though that the local timezone > > should just be transient state and not persistent config you'll have a > > hard time. I for one am certainly not convinced that the timezones are > > state... > > > > I mean, the line between persistent configuration and transient state > > is blurry, but in the case of DNS settings and timezone settings I > > certainly can draw a line easily. > > > > > timezone activity change is a very basic change one that needs to be > > > supported by the system. Why guard it with so much. > > > > We don't do that. Just make /etc/ writable ffs, if you want stuff in > > /etc to be changable. > > > > Lennart > > > > -- > > Lennart Poettering, Berlin > > > _______________________________________________ > systemd-devel mailing list > systemd-devel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx > https://lists.freedesktop.org/mailman/listinfo/systemd-devel _______________________________________________ systemd-devel mailing list systemd-devel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx https://lists.freedesktop.org/mailman/listinfo/systemd-devel