On Mon, 2010-11-15 at 14:08 -0500, Roman Bysh wrote:
On 11/15/2010 01:53 PM, Kay Sievers wrote:
On Mon, 2010-11-15 at 13:41 -0500, Roman Bysh wrote:
Dear Listmates,
I have also installed systemd and systemd-Gtk which should allow the me as user to see systemd in graphical format.
Has any one been successful in viewing the gui portion?
It's called 'systemadm', but not very useful at the moment.
It's just a pretty dumb client for the systemd D-Bus interface and not much more than an example or starting point for a possible future system service management interface.
Kay
I had seen a graphical representation where you were able to stop and start services. Is this systemadm? Is this something that we can see in 11.4 but more useful? And if it is, can we see this added to Yast in the future?
There are no plans currently from the systemd upstream side to extend this tool. We all use the command line version: systemctl and systemctl status <service> and systemd-cgls Systemctl also got color output and bash-completion. :) It presents more information than the gtk tool in some areas. Systemadm is really not much more than an example what *could* be done today for service management, compared to SYSV/LSB, which provided exactly zero information or service tracking, besides some mostly useless and rather random human-readable console messages. If people want to improve systemadm, it's more than welcome, but it's usefulness will probably stay limited.
Btw. With systemd, I was able to shave off 15 -20 sec. when booting to desktop. And, the shutdown is very fast!!
Sounds great. Thanks, Kay -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse-factory+unsubscribe@opensuse.org For additional commands, e-mail: opensuse-factory+help@opensuse.org