On 7/11/2022 3:25 PM, Henry Crun wrote:
On 11/07/2022 18:59, Mike Easter wrote:
Henry Crun wrote:
Systemd having been in the news lately, more or less as an experiment, I thought of trying to remove systemd from an Ubuntu 20.04 system (updated to the hilt).
Instead of removing systemd, if you choose to try the very popular (by DW pagehit rankings) MX Linux, you can boot w/ or w/o systemd.
When the GRUB screen is displayed at the very beginning of the boot process, click on Advanced options… and select to use systemd.
Also, the writeup at MX Linux on systemd done back in 2018 is worthwhile reading.
https://mxlinux.org/wiki/system/systemd/
https://mxlinux.org/wiki/system/systemd-overview/
Replying to the three responders, all of whom suggested I switch distros:
The reason I use Ubuntu now is that I started with Warty Warthog (almost a decade ago, IIRC) and over the years have my system just the way I like it. The last time I reinstalled, moving from 32-bit to 64-bit, it took me three months to get evrything
installed and tuned to my liking. I can even stand staying with systemd - my objection is more aesthetic than practical.
Also as I mentioned this is more an experiment than it is an urgent need.
So thank you for your advice, which I am afraid I will not be taking (seriously, no sarcasm implied)
I guess I'll have to accept imperfection.
Mike Rechtman
Missile address: N31.7624/E34.9691
Gentoo takes the situation seriously, and you can install
a systemd system or use their regular init system. The only
weirdness, is the Ethernet port can never be "en0" -- systems
where systemd is an "option", the namespace for devices continues
to follow the systemd standard, rather than anything else. The
stink of systemd, never entirely escapes a machine.
On one of my Gentoo installs, networking did not come up
automatically, and that's because the configuration did not
grok the systemd name for the Ethernet port. I had to fix
that manually. The last Gentoo I did, this was handled
gracefully, so they did eventually fix this.
In my opinion, Ubuntu does more fit and finish, than is
absolutely necessary. I was able to add NVENC and NVDEC
to my copy of ffmpeg, simply because they'd done the work
to put the correct -dev packages in their tree. Some of the
things you find in there, are not accidents. FOSS rules
may not allow them to state the obvious, but like gold mining,
you can find interesting things in there. If some web page
says a feature exists, it might be "only a recipe away" to get it.
You would not expect flipping an INIT system to be easy.
Remember the complexity of what you're doing. Some of
these little recipes, will not be for the timid. I would
feel more comfortable from a theoretical point of view,
chrooting in and trying that, rather than doing it on a live system.
But as bar bets go, this is well past my abilities to pull off.
Paul
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