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(move most of the info into a generic page since it isn't going to change per release much)
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Refer to https://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Systemd for more complete information on systemd in Fedora.  
Refer to https://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Systemd for more complete information on systemd in Fedora.  


= Developer =
=== Developer ===


Lennart Poettering (lpoetter AT redhat.com)
Lennart Poettering (lpoetter AT redhat.com)
= 4kB Sector disk boot support =
Booting 4kB sector disks in UEFI environments is now supported.


[[Category:Docs Project]]
[[Category:Docs Project]]
[[Category:Draft documentation]]
[[Category:Draft documentation]]
[[Category:Documentation beats]]
[[Category:Documentation beats]]

Revision as of 18:35, 20 March 2011

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Beat is open
This beat is now ready to have Fedora 25 content added by the beat writer


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This page is a draft only
It is still under construction and content may change. Do not rely on the information on this page. NEED rewrite: insert the boot options, remove or move some contents to other places, perhaps split it

systemd

systemd is a system and service manager, replacement for SysVinit and Upstart. After a six months shift, during which it has been more granularly tested, Fedora 15 brings in, by default, a new system daemon whose code is designed from scratch, with the objective to take the maximum advantage offered by modern Linux kernel.

With systemd, Fedora 15 boots-up faster, particularly on SSD; native systemd service configuration files (or units) are much easier to understand and configure compared to sysvinit scripts, as systemd uses .service files instead of bash script; all daemons are sorted into their own Linux cgroups, which you may explore beneath /cgroup/systemd in the file system hierarchy; administrative features of the init system are considerably extended.

Refer to https://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Systemd for more complete information on systemd in Fedora.

Developer

Lennart Poettering (lpoetter AT redhat.com)

4kB Sector disk boot support

Booting 4kB sector disks in UEFI environments is now supported.