SystemD is blamed for long boot times and being heavy and bloated on resources. I tried OpenRC and Runit on real hardware (Ryzen 5000-series laptop) for week each and saw only 1 second faster boot time.

I’m old enough to remember plymouth.service (graphical image) being the most slowest service on boot in Ubuntu 16.04 and 18.04. But I don’t see that as an issue anymore. I don’t have a graphical systemD boot on my Arch but I installed Fedora Sericea and it actually boots faster than my Arch despite the plymouth (or whatever they call it nowadays).

My 2 questions:

  1. Is the current SystemD rant derived from years ago (while they’ve improved a lot)?
  2. Should Linux community rant about bigger problems such as Wayland related things not ready for current needs of normies?
  • @SneakyThunder
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    81 year ago

    sudo su

    Why spawn additional process when you can get into shell directly with sudo -s?

    • @[email protected]
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      41 year ago

      Well, sudo itself is a purely optional component—you can run a system quite happily with just su .

    • z3bra
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      31 year ago

      What do you do with all the process you save with that trick ?

    • @[email protected]
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      1 year ago

      Because I already had my fingers closer to “su” than to “-s”… but really, because I tend to use sudo -E su on a remote terminal with a PS1 set to colorize the prompt based on whether I’m running root and the host if it’s remote, but sudo -E -s doesn’t run the root’s .bashrc that runs the updated colorization while at the same time exports too much of the user’s environment into the root shell.