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Ditch Your Display Manager, Use Startx Instead · The Kernal
thekernal.xyzWhen you boot into your Linux desktop, what do you see? If you are using the desktop version of most Linux distros, such as Debian, Fedora, or Ubuntu, you are going to see a display manager,
or, more commonly referred to as a “login manager”. While these have a use, especially if you are someone who has multiple graphical interfaces that you switch through on a regular basis,
for many people, they may as well be useless. So, if you would like to skip the hassle, and get right into your X session as fast as possible without any fancy GUI, I will show you how to
remove your login manager, edit your .xinitrc, and then start Xorg.
Something I would miss without a login manager would be the start of the D-Bus session bus, or the unlocking of the system keyring.
Does that stuff still happen? I didn’t try this but I had kinda hoped this stuff got fixed with the introduction of systemd.
I think so. With corresponding user services this should not be a problem. I am not sure though since my machines run openrc and runit.
It’s trivial to write a service to do this
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