Binary logging is some of the most asinine shit I’ve ever had to deal with on Linux (and yes, I know you can change it, but it being the default behavior is beyond absurd).
I like SystemD. I’ve found it fairly simple to use one thing to do all the basics I want, instead of 20 different programs with different config locations etc.
I’m with you on that, it’s massively over complex, intrudes into systems it has no place in, and has way too many bad design choices. The designers made the fundamental mistake of wanting it to do everything okish, rather than one thing well. The worst part is that pretty much everything people poibt to as benefits could have trivially been added to tools like sysvinit and rsyslogd.
It’s probably a lost cause, and I don’t think there are many of of us left who remember how to work with the tools that embody the “do one thing, well” philosophy, or how that led to stable, predictable, and easy to manage systems.
Just to mention it: I still don’t like Systemd.
It’s amazing that this is now a downvoted opinion.
The overall concept seemed fine, but it’s mired in some truly dogshit design decisions.
Binary logging is some of the most asinine shit I’ve ever had to deal with on Linux (and yes, I know you can change it, but it being the default behavior is beyond absurd).
It’s vastly superior to the systems it replaced
I notice a lot of the Linux community tends to dislike things that makes life easier for users.
I like SystemD. I’ve found it fairly simple to use one thing to do all the basics I want, instead of 20 different programs with different config locations etc.
This is fine, and one of the strong points of a diverse software ecosystem: Chose what works best for you.
I’m with you on that, it’s massively over complex, intrudes into systems it has no place in, and has way too many bad design choices. The designers made the fundamental mistake of wanting it to do everything okish, rather than one thing well. The worst part is that pretty much everything people poibt to as benefits could have trivially been added to tools like sysvinit and rsyslogd.
It’s probably a lost cause, and I don’t think there are many of of us left who remember how to work with the tools that embody the “do one thing, well” philosophy, or how that led to stable, predictable, and easy to manage systems.