runit has logging hooks and works with pretty much any logger. I use svlog, i can group things and search with cat + grep.
network user access
i don't understand, how does the kernel + whatever other network daemon not already handle this? is sshd not secure? sounds like a problem that sshd would be better possitioned to solve.
protect kernel access
protect it from what? protect it how? is kernel access permission, user groups, file permissions not able to solve these issues?
better stability
how? if a program is unstable, it is unstable. How does making some bloated init a middle manager poking services all the time actually help rather than just add to ram bueracracy bloat. (fix the instability of the service, that's where the theoretical problem is)
actual useful errors in-case of a system crash
how are svlog logs not "actually useful"?
device handling
the kernels literal job?
Linux is far more used in server
they are already using vm's inside of vms inside vms to manage things, because to do otherwise is too much cognative load.
if you'd rather learn 100 things useable in exactly one situation each, rather than 1 thing usable in 100 different situations, i don't know what to tell you.
i don't understand, how does the kernel + whatever other network daemon not already handle this? is sshd not secure? sounds like a problem that sshd would be better possitioned to solve.
protect it from what? protect it how? is kernel access permission, user groups, file permissions not able to solve these issues?
how? if a program is unstable, it is unstable. How does making some bloated init a middle manager poking services all the time actually help rather than just add to ram bueracracy bloat. (fix the instability of the service, that's where the theoretical problem is)
how are svlog logs not "actually useful"?
the kernels literal job?
they are already using vm's inside of vms inside vms to manage things, because to do otherwise is too much cognative load.
if you'd rather learn 100 things useable in exactly one situation each, rather than 1 thing usable in 100 different situations, i don't know what to tell you.