Linked by Thom Holwerda on Fri 6th Oct 2006 20:28 UTC, submitted by Görkem Çetin
Linux "For a long time, Linux has been blamed to boot slowly, compared to other modern operating systems. In this article, we are going to focus on a new init system we developed for our Pardus Linux distribution, Mudur, together with other initiatives that are worth mentioning. Mudur is written from scratch in Python with simplicity, speed and maintainability in mind. It isn't a replacement for the /sbin/init command like some other alternatives, nor just a parallel script executor. Mudur greatly simplified our boot process, making it faster and more flexible. Authors look forward for future boot process research for further improvement and optimizations."
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RE[2]: Finally
by deathshadow on Sat 7th Oct 2006 17:50 UTC in reply to "RE: Finally"
deathshadow
Member since:
2005-07-12

>> I think you got that mixed up. Professionals don't
>> give a shit about whether their system boots up in
>> 30 or 60 seconds. Non-professional kids do.


I agree with that on desktops, in fact it's a good point in that realm - but I'd argue it on servers. Downtime, ANY downtime is bad, yet there are still times where the only REAL answer, even in the *nix world, is a good old-fashioned reboot. When you are doing "shutdown -r now" across an SSH session, every second that server is down for reboot is a nail biting, white knuckle, please let it come back up nightmare... Especially if you have any sort of traffic that's suddenly IM'ing you en-masse "Did the server just go down?" despite a mass e-mail and announcement on the site(s) every day for three days.

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