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by yawaramin
1818 days ago
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> I didn't say that. Because they don't. Yes, you did. Here's a refresher: > My workplace even had to install corp software that forces a reboot every N days (with warnings ahead of time) because people just Do. Not. Reboot. I.e. sometimes computers just need to reboot, and there's nothing you can do about it. > Nobody cares If nobody cares, then why do people hate rebooting so much? |
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And this is the attitude that brings us shitty software, and "I dunno, just reboot to fix the problem?", which is what we have now.
Short of kernel upgrades they really really don't.
But if you've bought in to "oh computers just need to reboot sometimes", then I guess you fall into the category of people who have just given up on reliable software, or you don't know that there is an alternative and no this was not normal.
>>> We need desktops to boot up fast, because you said it yourself, sometimes they just need to
>> I didn't say that. Because they don't.
> Yes you did[…] > people just Do. Not. Reboot.
So is that what I said? I believe you did not read what you quoted.
The main reason people reboot is because of shitty software that requires reboots. So if you want to go self-fulfilling prophecy, then systemd is optimizing for boot times because it's low quality software that requires periodic reboots?
But maybe you count forced reboots once a month (or every two months) for kernel upgrades (but also the above arguments since they also run systemd and therefore need reboots). Fine.
So in order to save ten seconds per month (from a boot time of a minute or so, including "bios" and grub wait times, etc.., so not even a large percentage) this fd-passing silently breaks heaps of services, wasting hours here and there? And that's a good idea?
And all for what? Because you chose to have installed services you don't need, and don't use? And if you do use them, then the time was not saved anyway, but just created a second wait-period where you wait for the service to start up?
And ALL of these services could in any case be fully started while you were typing your username and password.
So what use case exactly is being optimized? The computer was idle for maybe half the time between power-on and loaded desktop environment anyway.
> If nobody cares, then why do people hate rebooting so much?
Because all their state is lost. All their open windows, half-finished emails, notepad, window layout, tmux sessions, the running terminal stuff they don't have in tmux sessions, etc… etc…