Hello all,

I just want to load off my bad mood :) so let me tell you, today i deinstalled 
systemd.

There were several problems, like with shut down, when sound card state should 
be saved but created a guru. Sometimes it didn't even boot because some ACPI 
thing stuck. Also my reboot / shutdown keys did not work anymore. I did not 
have these problems with sysvinit and now they seem to be gone again.

The next thing i don't like is the configuration, which is anything but 
intuitive. I had a hard time to find out how to fine tune my booting again 
(which requires some small custom adaptions), or to just shut up the massive 
message blurb that systemd loaded off my terminals, but still have a human 
readable logging. 

What pisses me off the most however is that the upgrade did not even ask me, if 
i want to switch.

I read up the architecture description and i'm shocked. The new systemd 
swallows a lot of essential subsystems (like udev and acpid) and its hunger 
seems still not satisfied. The main developers (which seem to be just 2 guys, 
only, which also is quite shocking for me, given the essential importance and 
critical freshness of the whole thing!) even state they want to integrate and 
streamline as much as possible. 

However, i'm quite sure that the old unix way of 'splitting it up into small 
specialized parts' is much more robust. For example, if one component is not 
working correctly, it can replaced . With systemd, you don't have this choice 
anymore and the whole system will be affected, in worst case, break down. 
You'll need to wait until upstream fixes your little thing, and with such a 
small developer base, and deep integration, it's highly questionable if that 
will be anything like timely, or happen at all. (These always were particular 
features of the Microsoft OS which i never was able to accept.)  

Having a choice also implies more security, because a secured system which set 
of active components are rather unknown can't be easily cracked. As a network 
admin, i'm totally against the idea of general 'streamlining'.

Now it seems the developers managed to convince gnome to create a dependency to 
systemd. It only means, i will not use gnome anymore. I hope KDE is not that 
silly.

I know this topic does not strictly belong here, well, but let's see if anyone 
here likes to argue my ideas. I don't even now to whom to complain, since i 
don't want systemd to get better, but rather, a completely different approach, 
and first of all with much broader agreement and support from upstream 
developers.
But if it boils down to 'do it yourself' which then this is clearly beyond my 
scope. I'm on the looser side here.

(But does anyone know who would be responsible for the switch, in Debian ?)

Kind regards,

mi






  


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