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systemd 251 Nears Release With Last Planned Test

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  • systemd 251 Nears Release With Last Planned Test

    Phoronix: systemd 251 Nears Release With Last Planned Test

    Released on Friday was systemd 251-rc3 as what should be the last planned release candidate for this first major feature update since last December...

    Phoronix, Linux Hardware Reviews, Linux hardware benchmarks, Linux server benchmarks, Linux benchmarking, Desktop Linux, Linux performance, Open Source graphics, Linux How To, Ubuntu benchmarks, Ubuntu hardware, Phoronix Test Suite

  • #2
    - A new component "systemd-sysupdate" has been added that automatically discovers / downloads / installs A/B style updates for the host installation itself or container images / portable service images. Systemd-sysupdate is currently considered experimental. This OS updating tool has been worked on by Red Hat / systemd developers going back to last summer.

    this is big. thanks Red Hat and systemd developers for hardwork.

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    • #3
      Wait a tick.... is not using diskseq a bit weird? would not /dev/disk/by-seq be much better? These days not everyone uses disks anymore.

      http://www.dirtcellar.net

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      • #4
        Originally posted by waxhead View Post
        Wait a tick.... is not using diskseq a bit weird? would not /dev/disk/by-seq be much better? These days not everyone uses disks anymore.
        Huh?

        Not sure what do you mean.

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        • #5
          - bustctl now uses the pcapng format for output rather than pcap.
          busctl*

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          • #6
            Originally posted by Vermilion View Post
            busctl*
            bustctl set-property size large

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            • #7
              Can someone explain why we need A/B style updates in desktops and servers? I imagine it would only be useful in a closed eco-system where the user doesn't have free access to the internals... like mobiles.

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              • #8
                Originally posted by TheDcoder View Post
                Can someone explain why we need A/B style updates in desktops and servers? I imagine it would only be useful in a closed eco-system where the user doesn't have free access to the internals... like mobiles.
                It can probably be useful sometimes and when it isn't, it just won't be used. What's the big problem? I just personally wish it could support Btrfs snapshots and ostree checkouts, not just A/B partitions which is a somewhat lame system.

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                • #9
                  Originally posted by TheDcoder View Post
                  Can someone explain why we need A/B style updates in desktops and servers? I imagine it would only be useful in a closed eco-system where the user doesn't have free access to the internals... like mobiles.
                  i believe you don't know what a/b style updates are. Several distros already do it with kernels so you have the older kernel still as fallback. Even if your system is so unstable you can't download thd older/another kernel you then still can use the previous one.

                  And we use systemd with realtime embedded systems, so this whole "desktop and server" argument is moot. No one sane still uses duct tape shell scripts.

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                  • #10
                    Originally posted by intelfx View Post

                    Huh?

                    Not sure what do you mean.
                    Not sure how you can be not sure what I mean... using the name "disk" seems pointless as this goes for all block storage devices as far as I understood it.

                    http://www.dirtcellar.net

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