• @ozymandias117
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      1210 months ago

      I was curious too, so I tried it in a virtual machine

      It half installed sysvinit, systemd failed to get fully removed, and apt gave up due to too many post-install errors

      The reboot threw me into an init that asked for me to specify the runlevel (since there wasn’t anything in init.d)

      I guess they didn’t understand the difference between that question and a logged in shell

      My guess before trying it was that they somehow got stuck in Grub’s shell

      • @[email protected]
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        410 months ago

        Yeah i remember debian installs sysvinit if you apt remove systemd and installs systemd if you apt remove sysvinit

        • @[email protected]
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          210 months ago

          haha why does debian bother adding this rule if the system will be left in broken state anyway

            • @ozymandias117
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              110 months ago

              (As the tester above) It is a broken state

              It failed to install the initscripts package because apt bailed out

              apt —fix-broken install got you a little closer, but the screenshot didn’t say they tried that

              My bet is this worked when systemd was first introduced, but since there’s not much use for it now, and sysvinit is deprecated, it just doesn’t accidentally work anymore

                • @ozymandias117
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                  110 months ago

                  You can’t - it’s just asking what runlevel to launch, and there are no files for any runlevel

                  You’d need to add init=/bin/sh through grub at that point