Then you can reboot so that the system boots off of sysvinit instead and then purge systemd with apt-getremove --purge --auto-remove systemd. This also removes packages that depend on systemd.
Then you pin systemd packages to prevent apt from installing systemd or systemd-like packages in the future.
depending on the distro
depending on the distro
How can you uninstall
systemd
?It will differ by distro, but generally for debian, you begin uninstalling systemd by installing something else like
SysV init
:apt install sysvinit-core sysvinit-utils cp /usr/share/sysvinit/inittab /etc/inittab
Then you will need to configure grub by editing
/etc/default/grub
changing:GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX_DEFAULT="init=/bin/systemd console=hvc0 console=ttyS0"
to
GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX_DEFAULT="init=/lib/sysvinit/init console=hvc0 console=ttyS0"
and then executing
update-grub
as root.Then you can reboot so that the system boots off of sysvinit instead and then purge systemd with
apt-get remove --purge --auto-remove systemd
. This also removes packages that depend on systemd.Then you pin systemd packages to prevent apt from installing systemd or systemd-like packages in the future.
echo -e 'Package: systemd\nPin: release *\nPin-Priority: -1' > /etc/apt/preferences.d/systemd echo -e '\n\nPackage: *systemd*\nPin: release *\nPin-Priority: -1' >> /etc/apt/preferences.d/systemd
Depending on if the distro is multiarch, you might also need:
echo -e '\nPackage: systemd:amd64\nPin: release *\nPin-Priority: -1' >> /etc/apt/preferences.d/systemd echo -e '\nPackage: systemd:i386\nPin: release *\nPin-Priority: -1' >> /etc/apt/preferences.d/systemd
This information was sourced from this wiki dedicated specifically to removing systemd on multiple distributions and replacing it with something else:
https://without-systemd.org/wiki/index_php/Main_Page/