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Just noticed that /bin/init aka /usr/bin/init is in package systemd-sysvcompat. That seems to imply that I can somehow boot in a "non-sysv compatibility mode" without having /bin/init .
I notice it's a symlink to /usr/lib/systemd/systemd ... perhaps that's supposed to be invoked directly by the kernel?
Even a brand-new image (2018-01-01) contains systemd-sysvcompat. Is a systemd-sysvcompat-less system supported?
I guess what I'm really asking is why systemd-sysvcompat is a separate package.
Last edited by jernst (2018-01-08 22:35:59)
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Is a systemd-sysvcompat-less system supported?
┌─[Shiv ~]
└─╼ pacman -Q systemd-sysvcompat
error: package 'systemd-sysvcompat' was not found
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jasonwryan: so how do you boot? With kernel param init=/usr/lib/systemd/systemd?
Last edited by jernst (2018-01-08 21:59:35)
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Yep.
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