this post was submitted on 05 Sep 2024
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While I do appreciate the effort, I cannot understand, who in their right mind would use musl and systemd together. For what purpose? If a person was already willing to manage a musl system, why wouldn't he also prefer sysVinit or runit or whatever?
I want to try alpine out but the lack of systemd support is a blocker since I don't want to add openrc support to all my Ansible playbooks that rely on systemd services and timers
It seems like postmarketOS is porting systemd to alpine for their next stable version, just something to keep an eye on
Maybe because that person uses systemd everywhere else and just doesn't want the overhead of maintaining two different init systems.
He already has the overhead of maintaining to C libraries, which is a lot bigger problem.
Well then the answer will most likely be: because they can and want to do it.
The reasons for choosing Musl over glibc are largely unrelated for choosing a service manager. You can want one without the other just fine.
My understanding is that it boots faster. That's a nice thing to have on a container that spins up on demand.
It boots faster than openRC (which is painfully slow). But runit is a lot faster than systemd, and there are init systems even faster than runit. And they all already work with musl. There is even dinit system specifically designed for containers.
What is the name of the dinit system designed for containers?
"dinit"
In general (there are exceptions) containers do not use service managers at all. They start 1 command and that's it.
I tested this with EL6 and EL7. There was no discernible difference. It was all theories and brochureware.
I can't understand anyone wanting that hot mess that is systemd anywhere. I'm only glad lennart went to microsoft so the pruning can begin.
There is no indication that anyone will be pruning systemd from distros in the near or far future. Systemd is here to stay and if anything it will only spread into more and more places as can be seen with projects like this.