It really isn’t. It feels fancy and like it does allsorts of clever stuff, but actually what you have is a massively over complex architecture, a non-deterministic (or perhaps a better term would be unpredictable) boot order, binary logging, excessively verbose configuration, and still some fundamental bugs in important daemons. You can fix almost all of that, but you shouldn’t have to. We had a solid, simple system before, now we have an over complex mess.
And everything it touches, it feels like it does differently just to be incompatible and extra, and like it goes out of its way to obfuscate everything to force you to use their programs to configure it rather than config files
It’s vastly superior to the systems it replaced
It really isn’t. It feels fancy and like it does allsorts of clever stuff, but actually what you have is a massively over complex architecture, a non-deterministic (or perhaps a better term would be unpredictable) boot order, binary logging, excessively verbose configuration, and still some fundamental bugs in important daemons. You can fix almost all of that, but you shouldn’t have to. We had a solid, simple system before, now we have an over complex mess.
And everything it touches, it feels like it does differently just to be incompatible and extra, and like it goes out of its way to obfuscate everything to force you to use their programs to configure it rather than config files