Introducing Upstart
Since the days of early Unix, systems have always had different methods of starting up, shutting down, and managing jobs. Throughout the development of Linux distributions, many saw the usage of System V init, the most common starting system, to be suitable. Distributions have a system that one way or another is compatible with this System V initialization.
Then came the time when distributions began to split apart more and more. Slackware Linux now uses a BSD-style init system, and Gentoo uses completely its own. Writing a cross-distribution initialization script now is not probable nor feasible.
Fast forward to mid 2006: Canonical software saw the release of Ubuntu 6.06, the most popular distribution at its time. But, it had still used the somewhat venerable System V Init process that had still not been changed. Canonical software employee Scott James Remnant had began to test out a new startup system based on System V Init. He called it “upstart,” and the system gradually began to make its way into Ubuntu 6.10.
This new system had promised to be a replacement for the System V init process.
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