I would agree but a stop job is currently running
>>108814946For (You):/etc/systemd/system.conf[Manager]DefaultTimeoutStopSec=1sDefaultTimeoutAbortSec=1s
[Manager]DefaultTimeoutStopSec=1sDefaultTimeoutAbortSec=1s
>>108815090Wow thanks anonchan!
I have OpenRC
>>108815090I need to change that as well
>>108814808>It just worksNo it doesn't
>>108815740Does this even happen nowadays? I haven't had this bullshit happen in ~10 years
I like runint and dinit.
>>108815753I don't know I switched to OpenRC 7 years ago and never had a problem since
>>108815761Are you the guy from the Gentoo thread? :3
>>108814808>it just works
>>108815740See >>108815090>>108815753It basically happens only if some service is misbehaving.
>>108815774Yes
I don't miss having to write scripts to start my services.
>>108815779Ok why can't it just tell me what service is misbehaving
>>108815090Holy shit fucking saviour how did I never came across this fix
>>108815798But it can? That's what systemd-analyze is all about.
systemd-analyze
>>108814808>a fuck you job is running ( poettering / no limit )
>>108815825Ok how do I run this when my system is locked up forever waiting some mystery stop job to finish?
>>108815840Ctrl+Alt+F2
>>108815875Does that even work when my system is shutting down? Either way SystemD is intentionally bloated obtuse garbage designed to give sysadmins job security and rhel certificate any value.I don't want hostile software like that on my desktop system. I like how OpenRC just tells me what it's doing and if there's a problem what it was.
>>108815903It's not "hostile", it's just slightly different (speaking about the init).The broader systemd project is about standardizing a base for GNU/Linux systems, personally I like some parts of it and dislike other parts of it, as with all Linux things you can decide which components you want and you can configure them.
>>108815798It literally does.>A stop job is running for stuck-service.service (1s/...)
>>108814808It just works, just not as good as sysV
>>108815761i am using runit - it just werks.
i like path units
>>108818448What are some interesting way to use path units?
I'm really looking forward to the new birthDate feature. Now systemd gives me and everything running on my system a convenient way to store it so that my desktop environment can wish me a happy birthday!
>>108814808If it's good enough for Debian, then it's good enough for me.
>>108818182Never did when I was using it