systemd handles a lot more than starting/stopping things, but that’s the core of it. It is used by many (most?) up to date linux distros, but some stick to the older and simpler initd.
Yes, but with a caveat: systemd is included, but by default something else is used instead (don’t remember what). Systemd can be enabled if you so wish.
Source: I used mx a few years back. I may not be up to date on this.
Probably yes. The mx iso used to come with an unused but available systemd that you could boot into instead of the default sysvinit, but now they have 2 different isos for the 2 different systems. If the iso is recently downloaded, you would have had to pick which to use.
I like this answer: short and accurate enough.
systemd handles a lot more than starting/stopping things, but that’s the core of it. It is used by many (most?) up to date linux distros, but some stick to the older and simpler initd.
@neidu3 @CallMeAl does mx linux use it ??
Yes, but with a caveat: systemd is included, but by default something else is used instead (don’t remember what). Systemd can be enabled if you so wish.
Source: I used mx a few years back. I may not be up to date on this.
Probably yes. The mx iso used to come with an unused but available systemd that you could boot into instead of the default sysvinit, but now they have 2 different isos for the 2 different systems. If the iso is recently downloaded, you would have had to pick which to use.
https://mxlinux.org/blog/changes-coming-with-mx-25/
@mmcintyre thanks for sharing this. So, I can directly download a systemd format of mx linux and work on either xfce or fluxbox.