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I cutover to systemd. Here are my experiences, for better or for worse. Maybe it will help someone.
The wiki's systemd migration page is very good! I followed it, yet ran into a few problems outside the scope of the page. I should add here that I want to run in a mixed initscripts/systemd environment fo ease my migration, as the wiki suggests. My system is a home server, and for external access I run only ssh.
Mounts -- Systemd hung trying to mount all my drives according to /etc/fstab, especially my ipod.
I changed most of them to "noauto" then I was ok.
Mouse woudn't work under X windows.
Looks like it was enumerated as /dev/input/mice not /dev/input/mouse0 as before. Added "mice" as a section in /etc/X11/xorg.conf and then it was fine.
Netcfg under systemd renamed my two ethernet interfaces from wan and house to wan0 and house0.
Ok, this wasn't a problem, but it's not what I expected.
Cups wouldn't start.
I googled and found someone else on the net had this same problem; he replaced the cupsd.socket file and it worked for him. It also worked for me.
Postgrey wouldn't start. It turns out that the postgrey.service file ignores the POSTGREY_ADDR variable in /etc/conf.d/postgrey, so it wasn't starting on the socket which I wanted it to, but on a hard-coded port number. Oh well.
So as I had done for cups, I cloned the default postgrey.service tile in /usr/lib/systemd/system to /etc/systemd/system, and removed the hardcoded port. Also had to "reenable" the service to make it pick up the new service file. Now it picks up /etc/conf.d/postgrey as I think it should.
SSH -- I have it running on a port other than the default.
Again, I cloned the sshd.socket file, changed the port, restarted it, and now it's ok.
Samba is started as a legacy service. Others are too, probably, like dhcp4. I suppose I'll have to eventually change the legacy samba service into smbd and nmbd like the old days.
Laptop -- Cutover to systemd on it too. Had a few problems like these above, but that's ancient history now (last week!) What I do like is that the power management functions work better now. It doesn't always wake up well from sleeping, but I suppose I'll figure that out someday too.
Last edited by jimbeam (2012-11-10 00:20:53)
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Is there a topic here?
This seems like it should go to your blog not on the forums.
"UNIX is simple and coherent..." - Dennis Ritchie, "GNU's Not UNIX" - Richard Stallman
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