Same here. Systemd totally destroyed Debian's stability for me. It got to the point where I couldn't do routine updates without systemd typically breaking in some obscure way. I can't have that nonsense going on with the servers I'm responsible for. So I slowly migrated them over to OpenBSD and things couldn't be better.
by Anonymous Coward writes:
on Friday January 26, 2018 @01:25PM (#56008503)
This is totally true. Before Debian, et al. switched to systems, my laptops, particularly Lenovos, were very stable. Now? They crash all the time. Slackware and others, particularly the BSDs, do not. Nothing has changed save systemd.
BSDs dying? (Score:2, Insightful)
Re: (Score:1)
I'd be more concerned about the effects of systemd on the Linux distributions. :)
Mod Parent Up.
After running Linux for a decade, systemd pushed me to try both FreeBSD and OpenBSD for the first time ever.
Re: BSDs dying? (Score:0)
Same here. Systemd totally destroyed Debian's stability for me. It got to the point where I couldn't do routine updates without systemd typically breaking in some obscure way. I can't have that nonsense going on with the servers I'm responsible for. So I slowly migrated them over to OpenBSD and things couldn't be better.
Re: BSDs dying? (Score:0)
This is totally true. Before Debian, et al. switched to systems, my laptops, particularly Lenovos, were very stable. Now? They crash all the time. Slackware and others, particularly the BSDs, do not. Nothing has changed save systemd.