this post was submitted on 12 Jan 2024
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I've ran into so many problems with systemd, that I just avoid it now. You do one thing and expect that to reflect on whatever you think it should reflect on, and it doesn't. Why? Some systemd thing does this or that and it doesn't let the message through. Ah, but you have an exception list for that. OK, cool, add to exception list, still doesn't work π. Turns out, that exception list thingie is like in beta (for as long as systemd exists), and it doesn't really work... well, at least not most of the time.
Not to mention various errors, daemons not responding (for god knows what reason), things being incredibly slow (compared to non-systemd based distros)... I just gave up, that is not a finished product from my POV.
I use Void now with runit, couldn't be happier βΊοΈ. Everything just works. If it doesn't, it's probably my fault.
Choice is one of the great things about Linux, and I don't see alternative init going away. For most people systemd is good enough and solves problems, so I agree, in that case popular init diversity has gone away.