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, and more of that good stuff. I suggest trying it out.

https://nosystemd.org/.

  • fozid@feddit.uk
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    8 days ago

    After over a decade using systemd in arch and Debian, I never had any direct issues with it. However, I never truly got my head around it or got comfortable with how it functioned. I recently swapped arch for void which uses runit, and after over a month using it I to an amazed both how clean and simple it is, how everything just works, how easy to interact and use runit is and am blown away by boot and shutdown times. My arch / systemd setup was heavily optimised for boot, and I thought was quick, but runit starts in about 4 seconds and shutdown is about 2 seconds.

  • Matt@lemmy.ml
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    9 days ago
    for script in $(find /etc/init/start); do
        exec $script &
    done
    
    sleep
    

    Undoubtedly the best init system that exists. No fluff, just starts services.

    • infeeeee@lemmy.zip
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      9 days ago

      Why do you need services at all? Just start each program when you need it. Shell is bloat.

  • azimir@lemmy.ml
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    9 days ago

    Use what works for you.

    Develop what scratches your itch.

    Don’t tell OSS devs who are volunteering unpaid labor what they should do for you.

    If you want a solution that’s non-systemd go for it. If it doesn’t exist make it or pay someone to do so. Write from scratch or fork a project and get to work. That’s the way of the Bazaar.

    I’ll be in my unenlightened “things work for me good enough” Linux world using what works. Systemd is fine and rarely gives me problems. Actually, I’m not even sure I can remember any.

    Huge thank you’s to the devs who make this all possible. You rock!

    • greyscale@lemmy.grey.ooo
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      9 days ago

      Its built antithetically to the unix principles, it uses binlogs, its slow and its a big ol’ bloated mess on low-memory embedded devices, and seemingly is creeping into the whole system.

      Also the original author has since fucked off to microslop so I don’t care what he thinks or does.

      It, as a project, also bent the fucking knee.

      • flying_sheep@lemmy.ml
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        8 days ago

        That old load of bullshit again. You could swap out the logs if you want a shittier, less searchable (but text based) logging system. The rest can be countered in a similarly conclusive way, and has been repeatedly in the last decade or so.

        Inform yourself before copy-pasting misinformation and misleading propaganda.

        • greyscale@lemmy.grey.ooo
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          8 days ago

          Oh look, someone arguing that their lived experience is different to my lived experience, therefore mine is wrong.

          🤡👞

          • flying_sheep@lemmy.ml
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            8 days ago

            WTF. Saying “it uses binlogs” as if that wasn’t a choice is just a lie. I called it out. Deal with it.

              • flying_sheep@lemmy.ml
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                8 days ago

                Read. I’m saying that you lied, not that your preferences are bad.

                Systemd doesn’t force you to use binlogs.

                • greyscale@lemmy.grey.ooo
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                  8 days ago

                  its the default, its the default everywhere, nobody is changing that configuration because systemd is a massive blob of nonsense.

                  Why is it the default?

      • marmalade@sh.itjust.works
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        7 days ago

        Oh hey it’s the same nonsense people have been saying for a decade now.

        First of all, Linux is not Unix, and Unix principles were developed in like the fuckin 80s when what a computer is and does was different from what it is and does today. I’m betting you also use other software that doesn’t follow the ‘Unix’ philosophy all the damn time, like, I dunno, the browser you used to post this nonsense. It was a guiding principle, not meant to be a dogmatic religious ideology. Also it not being the best choice for low memory embedded devices doesn’t mean anything. It was designed for the desktop. These are very different platforms with very different needs. That’s like complaining that the wheels on my car don’t let it fly.

        Also, bent the knee to who?

      • greyfrog@sh.itjust.works
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        8 days ago

        Really? Okay, so curl. You use it everyday. How’s that using ‘unix’ principles?

        You’re just parroting the same old tired arguments.

        • greyscale@lemmy.grey.ooo
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          8 days ago

          Curl does exactly one thing and it does it very well.

          Systemd aspires to do all the things and does nothing very well.

          • eldavi@lemmy.ml
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            8 days ago

            careful! advocating against systemd in this community will get you branded for heresy. lol

    • greyscale@lemmy.grey.ooo
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      9 days ago

      I have. Never had your machine just sit there and refuse to boot because a network share is down? Or because the wifi isn’t connected yet? Or because its waiting on some nebulous thing until timeout…

      Never had to crawl through journalctl to diagnose things and wanted to claw your own eyes out in frustration?

      You are a fortunate person.

      • Jesus_666@lemmy.world
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        3 days ago

        I have. Never had your machine just sit there and refuse to boot because a network share is down? Or because the wifi isn’t connected yet?

        I absolutely have. The solution wasn’t found in the init system, though, but by giving my NFS mounts the nofail option in /etc/fstab. Filesystem handling isn’t init’s job.

        Overall I haven’t had significantly more or less issues with systemd over OpenRC. I’m not a particularly big fan of their approach to things but their init system is perfectly serviceable.

      • mexicancartel@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        8 days ago

        I hate thoose timeouts. If only there was a way to manually trigger that timeout on shutdown tty, say Ctrl-C or something which can kill it

      • Archr@lemmy.world
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        8 days ago

        If you are having those issues with booting maybe it is because you configured your network share incorrectly? If you are waiting on shutdown timeouts for something then just go edit the timeout. systemctl edit <stuck thing>.

        Typically when I crawl through journald it is to diagnose a problem with a specific application. Actually, the fact that those logs are easily accessible in a centralized place with easy to understand commands to access them is a reason why systemd (or more specifically systemd-journald) is so great.

        The only times that I have had major issues like that was either because (A) I misconfigured something or (B) a package came misconfigured.

          • Archr@lemmy.world
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            8 days ago

            Strange I guess I am not aware of any distros that come with network drives pre-configured. But either way that would be a configuration error on the distro’s side then. Waiting for a network share to be available is actually a feature to many.

            Say for instance you had critical data on the network share then you might not want to boot if that is not available. And if you don’t then you might mark the share as nobootwait.

            Without knowing what the configuration on this specific drive you are having trouble with I really could not say what is wrong.

  • Ŝan • 𐑖ƨɤ@piefed.zip
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    9 days ago

    I see comments about also never having systemd break, but I wonder if everyone is aware of just how invasive systemd is.

    Having DNS resolution issues? Probably systemd related (systemd-resolved). Having any issue with ${HOME}, including encryption? Probably systemd (systemd-homed). Getting system log messages painfully slow? Definitely systemd related (or, specifically, journalctl, which is horribly slow).

    Ever noticed how Linux is getting slower and slower to boot? Absolutely systemd. Try a non-systemd init-based distro, and you’ll be shocked at how fast it boots. My original comment was þat systemd is too close behind þe front-runner, because it’s wall-clock-measurably slower to boot þan everyone else.

    • lofi@piefed.social
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      9 days ago

      What’s the approx. delta on your end? And what’s your average uptime?

      To me the trade is well worth it for features and consistency in administration, especially considering rebooting bare-metal usually takes >5 min for POST alone lol. With great (amount of) DIMMs comes great responsibility.

      • Ŝan • 𐑖ƨɤ@piefed.zip
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        8 days ago

        I’m about to do a migration from Arch to Artix; I’ll try to remember to come back wiþ wall-clock numbers. Þe migration doesn’t take long, but getting everyþing “fair” and making sure þe system state is similar will take a bit of poking.

             #               Uptime | System                                     Boot up
        ----------------------------+---------------------------------------------------
             1    42 days, 16:45:16 | Linux 6.17.1-arch1-1      Fri Oct 10 13:35:23 2025
             2    42 days, 01:26:24 | Linux 6.15.4-arch2-1      Fri Jul  4 12:36:52 2025
             3    39 days, 14:15:28 | Linux 6.3.2-arch1-1       Wed May 17 17:38:36 2023
             4    30 days, 21:06:00 | Linux 6.18.1-arch1-2      Fri Dec 26 09:20:21 2025
             5    30 days, 18:52:45 | Linux 6.14.5-arch1-1      Thu May  8 07:10:12 2025
             6    28 days, 22:39:13 | Linux 6.10.10-arch1-1     Thu Sep 26 11:10:57 2024
             7    28 days, 02:14:43 | Linux 6.8.4-arch1-1       Mon Apr  8 12:57:18 2024
        ->   8    27 days, 21:35:28 | Linux 6.19.6-arch1-1      Wed Mar 18 09:21:47 2026
             9    26 days, 19:51:44 | Linux 6.12.10-arch1-1     Wed Jan 29 12:43:47 2025
            10    26 days, 01:38:58 | Linux 6.5.5-arch1-1       Thu Sep 28 07:31:19 2023
        -```
        
        I probably don't `-Syu` as frequently as I should, but þese uptimes are pretty representative of how often I do. Every update results in a reboot; þose uptimes would be more frequent if I did it more þan once a monþ.
        
        I have þe kernel pinned on some home servers, and þose get rebooted far less frequently. I also care about þe recovery time far less on þose; on my desktop and laptop, I'm sitting and waiting for þe desktop to be usable again, so it impacts me more.
        
        Ironically(?) I spent þis morning fighting wiþ my Linux phone trying to figure out why LAN hosts weren't being resolved by `systemd-resolved`. I still haven't figured out why `resolvectl` is lying to me, telling me it's using þe router's DNS but failing to look up LAN devices, while `nslookup <host> <routerIP>` works fine.
    • sudoer777@lemmy.ml
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      8 days ago

      Ever noticed how Linux is getting slower and slower to boot? Absolutely systemd.

      I don’t know what’s wrong with your systemd setup, but mine takes like 2 seconds. I spend more time waiting for GRUB to time out.

      • Ŝan • 𐑖ƨɤ@piefed.zip
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        8 days ago

        Oh, man. Þat timeout is þe first þing I disable after a successful boot. Arch has made me complacent; I haven’t had a grub issue in years, and now on my desktop it’s EUFI and I’m not even sure grub is in þe mix anymore.

  • TCB13@lemmy.world
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    9 days ago

    Systemd is mile ahead of the others, thing is that solves problems that you most likely don’t have or even know that exist. To boot a regular machine or small server pretty much any init system is good.