Originally posted by starshipeleven
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Systemd 240 Released To End 2018 On A High Note
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I would like to say that one of my reasons to love systemd are the timers for a cron replacement? Not only that they are MUCH easier to write, but for the first time I have usefull logs of my timers, compared to sometimes nothing, sometimes nonsense on cron.
My co-worker (and systemd-hater, but his reason to hate it was the 3years of work to port the whole infrastruture to pure systemd) could fix 4 long standing bugs that happened only 2-3 times a year with cron.
What I still wish to get, would be a more dynamic environment.d that can run scripts/scriplets to generate some env vars. So we could phase out everything in /etc/profile.d
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Originally posted by jacob View PostI wonder if systemd development should try to synchronise with the distros' release cycles, maybe Ubuntu's since it's the major distro that releases the most often?
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Originally posted by frank007 View PostI'm just switching from systemd to a different init system. I already experienced an unbootable system (doing nothing) because of it. That's all.
Originally posted by frank007 View PostI remember Sysvinit, I remeber how easy it was to manage, I remeber everythin,
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Originally posted by frank007 View PostAt the moment this is the situation. Do you like an "under heavy development" OS? Feel free to use it, I do not call you insane. I want a different solution, I am a simple "Linux user" (not a sysadmin), and I want to keep my data safe in the hard disks. That's all.
simple linux user will not blame systemd for anything, he does not have skills and knowledge to pinpoint root cause of failure, he will just blame distro. so you are something else, you still have no knowledge, but you already have crooked hands to screw your system and blame someone else
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