[ale] One for systemd haters

Jim Kinney jim.kinney at gmail.com
Wed Oct 10 10:39:11 EDT 2018


Another way to look at this is those files are so absolutely critical
to the operation that naming in a way that defies ordinary users from
easily finding them helps protect their content. I would further
suggest that as those files have been renamed and apparently made an
automatic inclusion/embedded in the start-up of systemd that was the
intent all along but the method was not finished at the systemd release
in CentOS7/RHEL7. I see the -.mount and -.slice in Fedora 28 as having
been loaded/run/achieved but those are NOT explicitly named as such
anywhere in the /usr/lib/systemd/system structure. 
My dad once said a cuss word around his mom. She reversed the bowl of a
large cooking spoon on his head. 
On Wed, 2018-10-10 at 14:18 +0000, Lightner, Jeffrey via Ale wrote:
> "valid" and "reasonable" are two different things in my view.   
> You may have "valid" reasons to cuss out your great grandmother but
> almost no one else hearing you do so will consider it "reasonable".
> While it is true shell expansion can cause unexpected behaviors,
> creating a file with such a name is completely unreasonable even if
> allowed.    There are many characters one might put in a file name
> that most of us know not to do because of their special
> meanings.    Usually when one finds such a bizarre filename it is
> because of some typo or other action that added weird characters -
> not intent.   Typically if I find such files I verify they're not in
> use and delete them.  I couldn't do that in this case as it was
> clearly intended to exist.
> "your [developers] were so preoccupied with whether or not they
> could, they didn't stop to think if they should."
> -----Original Message-----From: Solomon Peachy [mailto:
> pizza at shaftnet.org]Sent: Tuesday, October 09, 2018 2:36 PMTo:
> Lightner, Jeffrey; Atlanta Linux EnthusiastsSubject: Re: [ale] One
> for systemd haters
> On Tue, Oct 09, 2018 at 06:23:29PM +0000, Lightner, Jeffrey via Ale
> wrote:
> As an FYI the “-“ at start of file name doesn’t just affect
> grep/egrep.  Any command that tries to look at * in a directory will
> have the issue because it expands that “-“ as if it were an
> additional flag to the command issued rather than just the start of a
> file name.
> The thing is, leading '-' is perfectly legal for a POSIX
> filename.  Which is why getopt and other bog-standard cmdline parsing
> libraries implement the special '--' option to signify that
> subsequent arguments are filenames rather than options.
> This quirk of shell wildcard expansion/ambiguity isn't anything new,
> especially to anyone who has had to work with real-world-supplied
> filenames.
>  - Solomon-- Solomon Peachy			       pizza at
> shaftnet dot orgCoconut Creek, FL                          ^^
> (email/xmpp) ^^Quidquid latine dictum sit, altum
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-- 
James P. Kinney III

Every time you stop a school, you will have to build a jail. What you
gain at one end you lose at the other. It's like feeding a dog on his
own tail. It won't fatten the dog.
- Speech 11/23/1900 Mark Twain

http://heretothereideas.blogspot.com/

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