Linux Mint and systemd? I hope NO!
Forum rules
Do not post support questions here. Before you post read the forum rules. Topics in this forum are automatically closed 6 months after creation.
Do not post support questions here. Before you post read the forum rules. Topics in this forum are automatically closed 6 months after creation.
Linux Mint and systemd? I hope NO!
I strongly believe GNU/Linux has to be as more UNIX as possible:
Small is beautiful.
Make each program do one thing well.
Build a prototype as soon as possible.
Choose portability over efficiency.
Store data in flat text files.
Use software leverage to your advantage.
Use shell scripts to increase leverage and portability.
Avoid captive user interfaces.
Make every program a filter.
So I hope Linux Mint will stay FREE of this madness called systemd!
Are there any directions for the future about this?
no flames, please.
Small is beautiful.
Make each program do one thing well.
Build a prototype as soon as possible.
Choose portability over efficiency.
Store data in flat text files.
Use software leverage to your advantage.
Use shell scripts to increase leverage and portability.
Avoid captive user interfaces.
Make every program a filter.
So I hope Linux Mint will stay FREE of this madness called systemd!
Are there any directions for the future about this?
no flames, please.
Last edited by LockBot on Wed Dec 28, 2022 7:16 am, edited 1 time in total.
Reason: Topic automatically closed 6 months after creation. New replies are no longer allowed.
Reason: Topic automatically closed 6 months after creation. New replies are no longer allowed.
Re: Linux Mint and systemd? I hope NO!
I think you are going to be disappointed, read through this thread: http://forums.linuxmint.com/viewtopic.p ... md#p823564
Re: Linux Mint and systemd? I hope NO!
Don't you know that Mint is based on Ubuntu and therefore just gets whatever is available upstream? The same goes for LMDE being based on Debian.asbesto wrote:So I hope Linux Mint will stay FREE of this madness called systemd!
Re: Linux Mint and systemd? I hope NO!
Ah, the 10 commandments ... er .... 9 commandments of UNIX. I think even UNIX has now violated most of those.
Since Debian will now use systemd and since Mint's LMDE points to Debian Testing you could set your system to do an update before going to sleep tonight and wake up with systemd in charge tomorrow morning.
If you use Ubuntu based Mint you won't see a change until Mint 18 at the earliest. Mint 17 will be based on Ubuntu 14.04 and that will still have Upstart. It's also an LTS release so if you hold out long enough and use it until support ends you're good for another 5 years without systemd.
5 years is an eternity in Linux so one of 2 things will happen:
*** systemd will be a credible, reliable, and stable mechanism by then and all your worries will seem silly.
OR,
*** systemd will be a credible, reliable, and stable mechanism by then so it will obviously have to be replaced with systemd2 or systeme and we'll start the whole thing over again.
Since Debian will now use systemd and since Mint's LMDE points to Debian Testing you could set your system to do an update before going to sleep tonight and wake up with systemd in charge tomorrow morning.
If you use Ubuntu based Mint you won't see a change until Mint 18 at the earliest. Mint 17 will be based on Ubuntu 14.04 and that will still have Upstart. It's also an LTS release so if you hold out long enough and use it until support ends you're good for another 5 years without systemd.
5 years is an eternity in Linux so one of 2 things will happen:
*** systemd will be a credible, reliable, and stable mechanism by then and all your worries will seem silly.
OR,
*** systemd will be a credible, reliable, and stable mechanism by then so it will obviously have to be replaced with systemd2 or systeme and we'll start the whole thing over again.
Please add a [SOLVED] at the end of your original subject header if your question has been answered and solved.
Re: Linux Mint and systemd? I hope NO!
Please don't post such things. People may mistakenly think that LMDE actually gets updates from Testing everyday.altair4 wrote:Since Debian will now use systemd and since Mint's LMDE points to Debian Testing you could set your system to do an update before going to sleep tonight and wake up with systemd in charge tomorrow morning.
Re: Linux Mint and systemd? I hope NO!
I red that topic - and they talk about Ubuntu/debian, not linux mint so my question make sense here
Re: Linux Mint and systemd? I hope NO!
And what would we have done without PulseAudio and Avahi? Of course these didn't work very well when they were initially released but that's what those unsung developers who cleaned it up and made it work are for.asbesto wrote:Hope someone stop poettering ASAP!
Please add a [SOLVED] at the end of your original subject header if your question has been answered and solved.
Re: Linux Mint and systemd? I hope NO!
Pulseaudio is the first thing I remove when installing a system or when I have problems with audio
avahi sometimes take over network configurations unaware of other programs doing the same... creating a mess!
avahi sometimes take over network configurations unaware of other programs doing the same... creating a mess!
Re: Linux Mint and systemd? I hope NO!
On a serious note though I have to admit that bringing avahi to Linux is noting short of a gift. Like I said before it didn't work too well when initially created but once it was given to a group of adult professional devleopers it became something wonderful.asbesto wrote:avahi sometimes take over network configurations unaware of other programs doing the same... creating a mess!
*** Using Samba in an all Linux or a Linux / OSX network becomes elegantly simple with mDNS / zerconf / Bonjour / Avahi. In fact you can under those conditions dismantle the Windows / netbios mechanism completely to satisfy those that think Samba is just for Windows.
*** Ever wonder how it is that when you install Linux today CUPS automatically registers all the shared network printers for you? That's Avahi ( What Apple calls Bonjour ):
To overcome the problems and keeping network printing as easy as before (this is why 10 years ago the distros switched to CUPS) the cups-filters project of OpenPrinting introduced cups-browsed, an extra daemon which by default listens to Bonjour broadcasts of remote CUPS daemons (of IPP printers coming soon) and automatically creates local print queues pointing to the shared printers making pure CUPS 1.6.x networks working out-of-the-box.
Please add a [SOLVED] at the end of your original subject header if your question has been answered and solved.
Re: Linux Mint and systemd? I hope NO!
Ah! nice to know but I remember manually discovering network printers via CUPS on a system without avahi-stuff... or I'm wrong?
Re: Linux Mint and systemd? I hope NO!
the transition in debian testing didn't happened in instant. it will take long time until sysvinit fully got replaced by systemd. testing will be freezed in the end of this year. I suppose the transititon will be happened on next cycle. that's quite long time. I've also heard that mint is considering to use only LTS for mint's base. if it's true at least we'll have two years without systemd on every mint releaseSince Debian will now use systemd and since Mint's LMDE points to Debian Testing you could set your system to do an update before going to sleep tonight and wake up with systemd in charge tomorrow morning.
If you use Ubuntu based Mint you won't see a change until Mint 18 at the earliest. Mint 17 will be based on Ubuntu 14.04 and that will still have Upstart. It's also an LTS release so if you hold out long enough and use it until support ends you're good for another 5 years without systemd.
Re: Linux Mint and systemd? I hope NO!
With cups-browsed there is no manual discovery or configuration ( although I would suggest you set options anyway ) for these classes of printers - it's automatic. Immediately after installing Linux these printers will be available to access from any application.asbesto wrote:Ah! nice to know but I remember manually discovering network printers via CUPS on a system without avahi-stuff... or I'm wrong?
Please add a [SOLVED] at the end of your original subject header if your question has been answered and solved.
Re: Linux Mint and systemd? I hope NO!
Just what is it that you don't like about systemd?asbesto wrote:So I hope Linux Mint will stay FREE of this madness called systemd!
I've been using systemd on ArchLinux since it happened (and even did the init => systemd conversion successfully on one machine instead of reinstalling). The biggest changes that I notice are that everything is services (I mean everything is services) and you get parallelism of services off-the-bat, which is in a way better than init or upstart. Oh, detection of removable devices like USB sticks, phones and internet with USB tethering works so much better than with init in my experience.
Re: Linux Mint and systemd? I hope NO!
+1 to what clfarron4 wrote. I also migrated to systemd on my Arch Linux install and it went without a hitch. It works for me
Clem already had LMDE up and running with systemd earlier this month, though that was just to experiment. When one of the package bases makes a change like this, and the change makes sense--as systemd does--then you should expect Linux Mint to follow. When changes are made that don't make sense you may expect Linux Mint to look for alternatives (like MATE and Cinnamon). But as already said, Linux Mint 17 won't have systemd as a default so if you really want to stick with Upstart for some reason then you can for the next 5 years with that.
Over on the Gentoo wiki there is a nice comparission of 5 init systems: https://wiki.gentoo.org/wiki/Talk:Compa ... it_systems. I see only reasons to get away from SysV and Upstart, and move to systemd.
Clem already had LMDE up and running with systemd earlier this month, though that was just to experiment. When one of the package bases makes a change like this, and the change makes sense--as systemd does--then you should expect Linux Mint to follow. When changes are made that don't make sense you may expect Linux Mint to look for alternatives (like MATE and Cinnamon). But as already said, Linux Mint 17 won't have systemd as a default so if you really want to stick with Upstart for some reason then you can for the next 5 years with that.
Over on the Gentoo wiki there is a nice comparission of 5 init systems: https://wiki.gentoo.org/wiki/Talk:Compa ... it_systems. I see only reasons to get away from SysV and Upstart, and move to systemd.
Re: Linux Mint and systemd? I hope NO!
Besides, if you are using the current version of Mint ( Mint16 ) or even Ubuntu ( 13.10 ) you are already using it - OK, not all of it but parts of it are already being used. Do a:
Canonical was outflanked.
Code: Select all
dpkg -l |grep systemd
Please add a [SOLVED] at the end of your original subject header if your question has been answered and solved.
Re: Linux Mint and systemd? I hope NO!
Maybe that was when CUPS supported SLP but SLP support has been removed for some reason from the Ubuntu at least CUPS build and probably from the source version since the switch to separate cups-browsed architecture, even though HP have SLP support in many recent printers.asbesto wrote:Ah! nice to know but I remember manually discovering network printers via CUPS on a system without avahi-stuff... or I'm wrong?
Read more about SLP at <http://www.openslp.ORG/>
Service Location Protocol
Service Location Protocol (SLP) is an Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF) standards track protocol that provides a framework to allow networking applications to discover the existence, location, and configuration of networked services in enterprise networks.
Re: Linux Mint and systemd? I hope NO!
I also hope that Linux Mint should be kept as far away as possible from systemd. It does not seem a good idea, although many Linux distributions already have passed him. Really, I do not think anything good. Although Manjaro so far it has worked well (and that having systemd), anyway, I do not think it's a good thing. Greetings.