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 @01:27PM (#56008525)
Yeah SystemD is really bad. It fails constantly, and crashes my entire system usually taking out my hard drive too requiring a full new install every time. WHen I tried to add new services they faild for unknown reasons and there is no error message or logs that help. Also I noticed that the SystemD process takes up 100% cpu and most of my free ram and there is no setting I can use to change it. I and my freinds have all switched to open bsd and things are way better for everyones. Totally faster and the services start and stop way better without errors and all the problems and the mystery crashing of memory and disk corruptions. Plus you can easy to write new services without complex confusing concepts of whatever that SystemD thing was doing. I am system administrator at major corporations and all servers are now open bsd instead of SystemD ones. After the switch I got a big raise too.
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:1)
Yeah SystemD is really bad. It fails constantly, and crashes my entire system usually taking out my hard drive too requiring a full new install every time. WHen I tried to add new services they faild for unknown reasons and there is no error message or logs that help. Also I noticed that the SystemD process takes up 100% cpu and most of my free ram and there is no setting I can use to change it. I and my freinds have all switched to open bsd and things are way better for everyones. Totally faster and the services start and stop way better without errors and all the problems and the mystery crashing of memory and disk corruptions. Plus you can easy to write new services without complex confusing concepts of whatever that SystemD thing was doing. I am system administrator at major corporations and all servers are now open bsd instead of SystemD ones. After the switch I got a big raise too.
Re: (Score:1)
systemd had an affair with my wife.
Re: (Score:2, Flamebait)
Uhhmmmmm
apt-get install sysvinit
apt-get remove systemd-sysv
Done and done. No more fscking systemd to fsck everything in the A.