• @lorabe@lemmy.ml
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    3 years ago

    Politically i dislike systemd, it just gives Red Hat too much control over GNU/Linux.

    But functionally, systemd is an amazing… linux framework, let’s say, and as an operative system that rules over the supercomputer market and the server market, you need that. GNU/Linux has to be the most advanced operative system on earth since it operates on the most advanced fields. So it’s just natural that Red Hat wanted such thing.

  • @Blattstruktur@lemmy.ml
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    103 years ago
    1. There is also Shepard, Guix’ init system.
    2. OpenRC still uses sysvinit under the hood as default I think?
    3. I really doubt any init is as fast as systemd especially under high load. Init freedom is still a good thing :)
    4. Links are “Unclickable for your security”? What? Is this about preemptive loading of links?
    • SudoDnfDashY
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      3 years ago

      A lot of links on posts will lead you to the correct website, but add their affiliate links or promo codes. It’s always safer to just copy/paste.

      Systemd is faster on good hardware, but booting with systemd on my hardware takes about double the time then it does with runit.

      • Helix
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        13 years ago

        It’s always safer to just copy/paste.

        Or you could read the popup of your browser.

        Copy paste can actually inject code which isn’t visible so you’d have to paste into a text editor and then into the URL bar to be safe.

    • @Echedenyan@lemmy.ml
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      13 years ago

      OpenRC can be used on top of BSD-style init, on top of SysVInit or can be used as its own with OpenRC-init.

  • @sgtnasty@lemmy.ml
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    73 years ago

    As a service back end developer, systemd has made life easier. But I never worked with the others.

  • Helix
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    23 years ago

    There’s also InitWare which is a fork/reimplementation of systemd with less interdependent parts. That means it doesn’t only run on Linux but also BSD and possibly other kernels.