What GNU/Linux distros are free from systemDick by default?

What GNU/Linux distros are free from systemDick by default?

Devuan

Void linux

Gentoo

MX Linux. Debian derivative with fucking awesome defaults, MX Tools are great, uses SysV by default but uses systemd-shim for compatibility stuff.

You dickheads just don't quit, do you?
Enuf with the systemd fud already ffs.

Try antiX. Great Live USB distro. Also great to install on a laptop.

ArchOpenRC

Fuck off, Poettering

Alpine

source on pic?

Boku no Pico. Now lurk more, newfag.

good alteranitevs to systemd?
sysvinit seems to be a common one. is that good?

CRUX

Crux

Runit

What's wrong with systemd?

...

...

Slackware

What's right with it...

Gentoo, Funtoo, Slackware, Artix, Parabola, Devuan, Void, GuixSD.

It restarts daemons that crash. Its start and stop commands don't suffer from race condition bugs like Sysv init scripts.

That is what it was designed to do...

Not him but I came anyway thanks

Restarts the daemons it crashes, wooooow

PCLinuxOS

Fuck you, Pottering.
Go cry somewhere about being harassed after spreading your cancer some more.

OpenRC can do this. There never was (nor is) anything that we needed systemd for. Every functionality had existing or in-the-works alternatives. And you can bet your ass that those alternatives wouldn't have practically forced the entire GNU/Linux community to use them.

Systemd is nothing but a scam to give Redhat more of a foot in the door. It's an inescapable conclusion the more you read about how it works and how the devs go about their business.

its infinite timers makes booting fail tho. it needs an live usb if you want to fix it.

Is Gentoo really that much a pain to install or configure?

Not really. There's a handbook and you can look anything up online. Gentoo's tools and ebuild preparation work also are pretty damn srs.

Configured it to use systemd instead of openrc in like 20 minutes only, has worked since.

>Configured it to use systemd instead of openrc
Literally why? So you can type "systemctl start something" instead of "./etc/init.d/something start"?
Or did you just want to show your die hard support for systemd?

Lots of reasons.

Better diagnostics overall, more efficient logging without dealing with logrotate and such extra tools just to handle text logs, timers (better fcron alternative) are builtin, better dependency management in starting services, the ability to instantiate init services under normal user accounts (systemctl --user) which is very useful for syncthing and various web server things, watchdog functionality, easier and better automounting (udev & even autofs sucks, x-systemd.automount is much better and easier to setup), systemd-nspawn's ability to easily create much better jailed environments, and surely many other things I forgot.

Also was easier in a tftp booted setup with basically all network mounted filesystems, but I'm not doing that anymore, currently.

timers are garbage, they never work like they should and theres no way to exit it by pressing ctrl c or something like the old init systems have.

Of course timers work, like everything else I need to use.

> theres no way to exit it by pressing ctrl c or something like the old init systems have.
That something would be vixie-cron & at, anacron, fcron or such.

And no, you don't ctrl-c that in general because it's not in the foreground of your shell.

-devuan
-antiX
-Sup Forumsentoo
-cloveros
-slackware

Then you have to ask what GNU/Linux apps don't depend on systemDick.

Can it run TLP?

>calls others newfag when he just found out about Pokaan 9 years after it's release because of a porn game

Good one

Should i install void or gentoo?

>GNU
none

Both! Figure out which you like more by actually using them

Thanks user, will install Gentoo on my desktop after installing void on my macbook air.

Good luck! I hope you find what you're looking for, either way!

8.8.8.8 as fallback default.

The single distro that is also an official GNU project GuixSD is systemd free and uses the GNU Shepherd instead. They even forked logind to remove the systemd dependencies from it and make it work on it's own.