this post was submitted on 27 Aug 2023
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Ive been runing Debian 12 (kde) since bookworm was released and am loving it.

I have recently discovered Devuan which seems to be Debian without systemd - what is the benefit of removing this init system?

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[–] [email protected] 5 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) (1 children)

Ah my mistake. I'm just generally curious about what distros use an alternative to systemd (not that I have any issues with systemd myself but I like variety).

So I googled what init system Slackware uses and read this page.

http://slackware.com/config/init.php (no https)

They mention several scripts on that page and that's why I thought they use scripts.

But I haven't actually used the Slackware yet. Suppose I should though since I'm interested.

[–] [email protected] 4 points 1 year ago (1 children)

No, you're right that it has scripts, they're just not the scripts used by SysV-style init systems. They have different names, are in different locations, and are executed differently.

I used Slackware for several years back in the 90s, and from that experience I'd recommend against learning it. I mean, with VMs today it's simple to try new distributions, so go for it, but I'd put it waaaaay down the list of distributions/operating systems to try. If you have anything else you're interested, put it first. Slackware is standard Linux so there's nothing really special you'd find when using it, and it's just a painful experience in general. I think some people will argue that it helps you "really learn Linux", but I don't think so. It just helps you learn Slackware's idiosyncrasies, and learning pretty much any other distribution would be more beneficial than that.

Slackware has advanced from when I used it in the 90s, but only barely (they have a network-based package manager now, I guess, although it proudly avoids dependency resolution!)

[–] [email protected] 3 points 1 year ago

Oof that stance on dependency resolution is a big no for me. As much as I hated building gnome from source it was amazing that Gentoo can do that in a single command.