Before anything else, I would like to say that I admit systemd has brought great change to GNU/Linux. sysvinit wasn’t the best, and custom scripts for every distro is a pain I’d rather not have.

With that said, Poettering now works for Microsoft, systemd has basically taken over all of the common/popular distributions (if this is about the argument of “systemd making it easier for developers”, disclaimer: I don’t know. I’m not a developer), and this has led to a rampant monopolisation of the init system.

Memes aside, this has very real consequences. If you don’t want another CentOS-style “oof, sorry, off to testing” debacle happening with your init system, might want to look at the more “advanced” distributions that let you choose the init system.

I am well aware that systemd works well for the most part, and that gamers and most other people likely don’t care - which is fine, at least for now. I do expect to see a massive turnover in sentiment if something ever happens to systemd (not that I’d like for that to happen, but no trusting RedHat anymore), but I suppose we’ll get to it when we do.

My sentiments are well enunciated in this recent post on the Devuan forum: https://dev1galaxy.org/viewtopic.php?id=5826

Cheers!

  • @woelkchen
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    221 year ago

    You will be shocked if you find out that virtually every distro runs on the same kernel. Pure monopolisation!

    FUCK! What’s next? Everything using glibc?

    • @MigratingtoLemmyOP
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      31 year ago

      I’m a proponent of musl with Alpine, Gentoo and Void. I’m all for it.

      • @woelkchen
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        61 year ago

        I’m a proponent of musl with Alpine, Gentoo and Void. I’m all for it.

        Not binary compatible with gibc, so I guess it’s a victim of the glibc monopoly then.