Ulrich, I also wasn't happy when SLES switched to systemd because it meant that I had to learn a lot of new stuff and forget many of the knowledge that I head collected over the years for system V. But before I switched all my SLES/D 11 systems to SLE 12 I ran a test host for about half a year to learn about systemd as much as possible before using it in our real environment. I ran into many problems (even a few bugs in the systemd version in SLE 12 that SuSE fixed for me) and some of them took me quite a while to figure out how thinks worked in systemd. I asked a few questions here on the list and got helpful answers immediately. And after 3-4 months I felt I had learned everything for running the things I ran before in system V. And then I could start enjoying the advantages of systemd like using drop-ins or systemds auto-mount features or writing my first own generator for tweaking things the way I like. They really solve a lot of drawbacks you had to live with in system V. So I'd really recommend to take the time to play around with systemd and learn how to use it. Especially in SuSE you will be able to do everything the way it worked before, even getting a different output for "status" (that we used in some system V scripts to get more information than "running" etc.), by tweaking /sbin/service or writing a little wrapper for it. Refusing to get used to the new system won't help. In SLE 15 almost every old reference to system V has been dropped. And you would be surprised how much advantages you can get from the new features. cu, Frank -- Dipl.-Inform. Frank Steiner Web: http://www.bio.ifi.lmu.de/~steiner/ Lehrstuhl f. Bioinformatik Mail: http://www.bio.ifi.lmu.de/~steiner/m/ LMU, Amalienstr. 17 Phone: +49 89 2180-4049 80333 Muenchen, Germany Fax: +49 89 2180-99-4049 * Rekursion kann man erst verstehen, wenn man Rekursion verstanden hat. * _______________________________________________ systemd-devel mailing list systemd-devel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx https://lists.freedesktop.org/mailman/listinfo/systemd-devel