04.27.20

Gemini version available ♊︎

Running GNU/Linux With a Top Process Controlled by Microsoft and Far Too Many Lines of Code

Posted in Free/Libre Software, GNU/Linux, IBM, Microsoft, Red Hat at 12:46 am by Dr. Roy Schestowitz

“In February 2014, musls Rich Felker opined that PID 1 is too special, should be 10 lines of code and not require reboot on upgrade. PID 1 should only start the real init script, and reap zombie processes. All the functionality of systemd then can be provided by the init script and programs run from it. PID 1 so has only a small attack surface, and user level programs can evolve diversly.”Wikipedia on “Broken by design: systemd”

When you study systemd code; What they tell you systemd does

Summary: Bloated programs may be very feature-rich (plenty of decent features); but what happens when systems that are supposedly Free (libre) become far too complicated to break apart and study, modify, and fork? Exercising one’s software freedom certainly becomes harder and it’s a support contract lock-in (high exit barriers due to “features” or complexity creep)

THE systemd project, controlled primarily by IBM and hosted by/developed on a Microsoft proprietary software trap, is something that merits at least scepticism if not criticism and condemnation, regardless of whom (person/s and company/ies) it was developed by.

“Systemd is well over a million lines of code! Watch the file count: over 36,000!”Nothing should be above criticism, we’re not a cult and Free software is not a religion (it was founded by an Atheist). This morning I decided to check just how massive systemd had gotten, knowing that it adds far more lines than it removes (many also get removed, which makes keeping abreast of this project close to impossible and studying security impact truly impractical). This is why Techrights is moving away from systemd and has partly done that already.

Based on this tool (hijacked by Microsoft of course, seeing a monopoly that wasn’t its own), this is how bloated systemd became:

systemd size

Oh, look… it’s so bloated that the program gets stuck and never executes until exhaustion (except of resources/timeout). It didn’t expect projects to become so massive. Systemd is well over a million lines of code! Watch the file count: over 36,000! Here’s the output as an attachment (this list alone is a 1.3 MB text file).

As we wrote this morning, eventually we hope to use no virtual machines and no systemd, either. We have our own, self-hosted Git server (not GitHub) and code we’ll eventually share publicly. The code we have is short and functional; it does the job with not even a thousand lines of code. Simple programs are generally superior and are considered more elegant than messy programs with endless flaws and massive technical debt. That’s what many things became, perhaps because it’s conveniently assumed that security doesn’t really matter and old computers should just be retired. This is increasingly the mentality in “Linux”, unlike say in OpenBSD.

Share in other sites/networks: These icons link to social bookmarking sites where readers can share and discover new web pages.
  • Reddit
  • email

Decor ᶃ Gemini Space

Below is a Web proxy. We recommend getting a Gemini client/browser.

Black/white/grey bullet button This post is also available in Gemini over at this address (requires a Gemini client/browser to open).

Decor ✐ Cross-references

Black/white/grey bullet button Pages that cross-reference this one, if any exist, are listed below or will be listed below over time.

Decor ▢ Respond and Discuss

Black/white/grey bullet button If you liked this post, consider subscribing to the RSS feed or join us now at the IRC channels.

DecorWhat Else is New


  1. Standard Life (Phoenix Group Holdings): Three Weeks to Merely Start Investigating Pension Fraud (and Only After Repeated Reminders From the Fraud's Victims)

    As the phonecall above hopefully shows (or further elucidates), Standard Life leaves customers in a Kafkaesque situation, bouncing them from one person to another person without actually progressing on a fraud investigation



  2. Standard Life Paper Mills in Edinburgh

    Standard Life is issuing official-looking financial papers for companies that then use that paperwork to embezzle staff



  3. Pension Fraud Investigation Not a High Priority in Standard Life (Phoenix Group Holdings)

    The 'Open Source' company where I worked for nearly 12 years embezzled its staff; despite knowing that employees were subjected to fraud in Standard Life's name, it doesn't seem like Standard Life has bothered to investigate (it has been a fortnight already; no progress is reported by management at Standard Life)



  4. Links 20/03/2023: Tails 5.11 and EasyOS 5.1.1

    Links for the day



  5. Links 20/03/2023: Amazon Linux 2023 and Linux Kernel 6.3 RC3

    Links for the day



  6. IRC Proceedings: Sunday, March 19, 2023

    IRC logs for Sunday, March 19, 2023



  7. An Update on Sirius 'Open Source' Pensiongate: It's Looking Worse Than Ever

    It's starting to look more and more like pension providers in the UK, including some very major and large ones, are aiding criminals who steal money from their workers under the guise of "pensions"



  8. Services and Users TRApped in Telescreen-Running Apps

    TRApp, term that lends its name to this article, is short for "Telescreen-Running App". It sounds just like "trap". Any similarity is not purely coincidental.



  9. Links 19/03/2023: Release of Libreboot 20230319 and NATO Expanding

    Links for the day



  10. Great Things Brewing

    We've been very busy behind the scenes this past week; we expect some good publications ahead



  11. Links 19/03/2023: LLVM 16.0.0 and EasyOS Kirkstone 5.1 Releases

    Links for the day



  12. IRC Proceedings: Saturday, March 18, 2023

    IRC logs for Saturday, March 18, 2023



  13. Links 18/03/2023: Many HowTos, Several New Releases

    Links for the day



  14. Links 18/03/2023: Tor Browser 12.0.4 and Politics

    Links for the day



  15. Links 18/03/2023: Docker is Deleting Free Software Organisations

    Links for the day



  16. IRC Proceedings: Friday, March 17, 2023

    IRC logs for Friday, March 17, 2023



  17. New Talk: Richard Stallman Explains His Problem With Rust (Trademark Restrictions), Openwashing (Including Linux Kernel), Machine Learning, and the JavaScript Trap

    Richard Stallman's talk is now available above (skip to 18:20 to get to the talk; the volume was improved over time, corrected at the sender's end)



  18. Links 17/03/2023: CentOS Newsletter and News About 'Mr. UNIX' Ken Thompson Hopping on GNU/Linux

    Links for the day



  19. The European Patent Office's Central Staff Committee Explains the Situation at the EPO to the 'Yes Men' of António Campinos (Who is Stacking All the Panels)

    The EPO’s management is lying to staff (even right to their faces!) and it is actively obstructing attempts to step back into compliance with the law; elected staff representatives have produced detailed documents that explain the nature of some of the problems they’re facing



  20. Links 17/03/2023: Linux 6.2.7 and LibreSSL 3.7.1 Released

    Links for the day



  21. GNU/Linux in Honduras: 10% Market Share? (Updated)

    As per the latest statistics



  22. Links 17/03/2023: Update on John Deere’s Ongoing GPL Violations and PyTorch 2.0

    Links for the day



  23. IRC Proceedings: Thursday, March 16, 2023

    IRC logs for Thursday, March 16, 2023



  24. RMS: A Tour of Malicious Software, With a Typical Cell Phone as Example

    Tonight in Europe or this afternoon in America Richard M. Stallman (RMS), who turned 70 yesterday, gives a talk



  25. Skyfall for Sirius 'Open Source': A Second Pension Provider Starts to Investigate Serious (Sirius) Abuses

    Further to yesterday's update on Sirius ‘Open Source’ and its “Pensiongate” we can gladly report some progress following escalation to management; this is about tech and “Open Source” employees facing abuse at work, even subjected to crimes



  26. NOW: Pensions Lying, Obstructing and Gaslighting Clients After Months of Lies, Delays, and Cover-up (Amid Pension Fraud)

    The “Pensiongate” of Sirius ‘Open Source’ (the company which embezzled/robbed many workers for years) helps reveal the awful state of British pension providers, which are in effect enabling the embezzlement to carry on while lying to their clients



  27. Links 16/03/2023: War Escalations and More

    Links for the day



  28. Links 16/03/2023: OpenSSH 9.3 Released and WordPress 6.2 Release Candidate 2, Lapdock News

    Links for the day



  29. IRC Proceedings: Wednesday, March 15, 2023

    IRC logs for Wednesday, March 15, 2023



  30. Links 16/03/2023: OpenSSL 3.1 Released, 10,000 More Staff Cut in Facebook, and Windows Loses 10% in Speed

    Links for the day


RSS 64x64RSS Feed: subscribe to the RSS feed for regular updates

Home iconSite Wiki: You can improve this site by helping the extension of the site's content

Home iconSite Home: Background about the site and some key features in the front page

Chat iconIRC Channel: Come and chat with us in real time

Recent Posts