The aim of this paper is to discuss some basic notions regarding generic glass-forming systems composed of particles interacting via soft potentials. Excluding explicitly hard-core interaction, we discuss the so-called glass transition in which a supercooled amorphous state is formed, accompanied by a spectacular slowing down of relaxation to equilibrium, when the temperature is changed over a relatively small interval. Using the classical example of a 50-50 binary liquid of N particles with different interaction length scales, we show the following. (i) The system remains ergodic at all temperatures. (ii) The number of topologically distinct configurations can be computed, is temperature independent, and is exponential in N. (iii) Any two ...