, on 10 July 2015 Poettering is known for having controversial technical and architectural positions regarding the Linux ecosystem. His style has brought accusations that he is working against long-standing
Unix philosophy, For instance, Poettering has advocated speeding up Linux development at the expense of breaking compatibility with
POSIX and other
Unix-like operating systems such as the
BSDs. He took this position because of his experience in writing some other low-level components in the desktop stack. He invites other developers to do the same. Poettering recommends also reading
The Linux Programming Interface but ignoring the POSIX-specific parts. In 2014 Poettering published an essay criticising how software in Linux distros is commonly packaged, updated, and deployed; and laid out proposals for architecture changes, developed by himself,
Kay Sievers,
Harald Hoyer, Daniel Mack, Tom Gundersen, and David Herrmann. The
controversy around systemd culminated in personal attacks and alleged
death threats against Poettering. Poettering went on to put some blame on
Linus Torvalds and other
kernel developers for being bad
role models for encouraging an abusive discussion culture on technical disagreements. == References ==