At the All Systems Go conference in Berlin 20-22 September, Lennart Poettering proposed a new extension to systemd, systemd-homed.service. A video of his session can be downloaded from media.ccc.de with accompanying slides [PDF].
In his presentation, Poettering outlines a number of problems he sees with the current system, like /etc needs to be writeable, UIDs need to be consistent across systems, and lack of encryption and resource management.
His goals with the proposed solution are migrateable and self-contained, UID-independent home directories with extensible user records that unify the user's password and encryption key; LUKS locking on system suspend; and Yubikey support.
He identifies a number of problems this new idea could cause with SSH logins, disk space assignments, UID assignments, and LUKS locking.
He plans to introduce JSON user records that can be queried via a Varlink interface and to a certain extent are convertible to and from existing formats. The home directories will be stored as LUKS-encrypted files that will be managed by the proposed new service, systemd-homed.service. The system integration will be supported by pam_systemd and systemd-logind.service.
It will be interesting to see how the world responds to this new take on systemd's ever-increasing encroachment of Linux.
... and lastly, this story is brought to you from a systemd-free laptop.
(Score: 2) by rleigh on Sunday September 22 2019, @10:47PM (1 child)
I did this nearly five years back now (can't believe it's been that long!). FreeBSD has been a totally solid system, and for the server-side, I can't see myself going back. On the client side, it hasn't been so great, mainly down to GPU drivers. They have improved massively, so I won't say never, but I can't afford the disruption until it's going to be worth the switch.
(Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Sunday September 22 2019, @11:46PM
"Desktop" oriented drivers are always the problem with *bsd. Perhaps as more people finally jump ship and bring their skills with them, that might change.