You didn’t realize there was a problem to solve because others, the distro maintainers and developers, worked their asses off to solve that problem for you.
Standard boiler plate response to not having had to ever do this. I started with Slackware Linux and still keep a installation around to keep up with how things work. I solve my own problems and its for that reason You’re explanation falls short. In truth it isn’t that difficult and it many ways preferable to not hand over control of services to one over reaching controller. I’ve had systemd hangup where sysv would have just kept on sailing.
Its perhaps because I have so much experience with both that I can truly see how systemd isn’t the cure all its purported to be.
Such as?
Such as initscripts being a nightmare to maintain, and insufficient for the complexity of a modern system. Read about it here: https://redlib.privacyredirect.com/r/archlinux/comments/4lzxs3/why_did_archlinux_embrace_systemd/
You didn’t realize there was a problem to solve because others, the distro maintainers and developers, worked their asses off to solve that problem for you.
Standard boiler plate response to not having had to ever do this. I started with Slackware Linux and still keep a installation around to keep up with how things work. I solve my own problems and its for that reason You’re explanation falls short. In truth it isn’t that difficult and it many ways preferable to not hand over control of services to one over reaching controller. I’ve had systemd hangup where sysv would have just kept on sailing.
Its perhaps because I have so much experience with both that I can truly see how systemd isn’t the cure all its purported to be.