- cross-posted to:
- [email protected]
- cross-posted to:
- [email protected]
Because of the ubiquity, nay, monopoly of systemd I always assumed it was miles ahead of other init systems. Nope. I’ve been using a non-systemd environment for a while and must say I’m surprised by how little breaks, i.e., next to nothing. Moreover, boot and shutdown times are faster. I’d suggest trying it out.
OC writeup by @[email protected]


There’s a good reason sysv isn’t on the meme.
If you think it never broke, that’s because you weren’t doing anything different or creating anything that required it.
That said, systemd had a tendency to break even if you didn’t either. But nowadays the bugs are mostly fixed, and the stupidity is contained on parts people mostly don’t adopt.
🤔, I’m not sure what would cause it to break other than a misconfiguration, my setup isn’t stock though, my most recent endeavor was migrating to a VTless system, so I do a lot of “different” and non-conventional things. Sure I’ve had configs break but it’s because I made a mistake, that’s not the init’s fault.