On Wednesday 24 Sep 2014 15:43:55 Dirk Gently wrote:
Anton Aylward wrote:
On 09/24/2014 02:15 AM, Felix Miata wrote:
I don't think the same about systemd so much any more after reading a few days ago this:
http://lists.freedesktop.org/archives/systemd-devel/2014-September/023294 .html> That's excellent.
Those 17 points sum up 'the UNIX way' very well, much better than the rants we've seen here, which have mostly been recidivist.
The claims that systemd is undocumented and similar are quite unfounded.
If it's not in the man pages, it's not documented.
man systemd - works for me NAME systemd, init - systemd system and service manager SYNOPSIS systemd [OPTIONS...] init [OPTIONS...] {COMMAND} DESCRIPTION systemd is a system and service manager for Linux operating systems. When run as first process on boot (as PID 1), it acts as init system that brings up and maintains userspace services. For compatibility with SysV, if systemd is called as init and a PID that is not 1, it will execute telinit and pass all command line arguments unmodified. That means init and telinit are mostly equivalent when invoked from normal login sessions. See telinit(8) for more information. When run as system instance, systemd interprets the configuration file system.conf, otherwise user.conf. See systemd-system.conf(5) for more information. OPTIONS The following options are understood: -h, --help Prints a short help text and exits.
If I can't bring up my system to full GUI status, no amount of online webpages are worth a single shit.
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